British Private Medical Practice and the National Health Service

British Private Medical Practice and the National Health Service

Author: Samuel Mencher

Publisher: University of Pittsburgh Pre

Published: 2010-11-23

Total Pages: 144

ISBN-13: 082297570X

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Samuel Mencher spent a year in Great Britain (1965-1966) interviewing leaders of professional medical associations, executives of the health insurance societies, and general practitioners and specialists engaged in private practice. His study of the private medical service twenty years after the passage of the National Health Service Act reviews the changes, problems, and successes of the National Health Service: trends in the amount and types of private medicine, the issues of conflict between private medicine and public policy, and attitudes of the public and of medical professionals.


Private Practice in Britain: the Relationship of Private Medical Care to the National Health Service

Private Practice in Britain: the Relationship of Private Medical Care to the National Health Service

Author: Samuel Mencher

Publisher:

Published: 1967

Total Pages: 104

ISBN-13:

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Study of the extent and features of private sector service practice by medical physicians in the UK - comments on legislation concerning the public service health service, and covers private health insurance facilities, the characteristics of patients prefering private medical care, the views of general practitioners and medical consultants, the future of private medical practice, etc. References at the end of each chapter.


Private practice in the health service

Private practice in the health service

Author: Northern Ireland: Northern Ireland Audit Office

Publisher: Stationery Office

Published: 2006-05-18

Total Pages: 23

ISBN-13: 9780102940008

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Consultants employed within the publicly funded health service have the opportunity to work in the private sector. Part 1 of this report focuses on how the Department of Health, Social Services and Public Safety and the health service trusts in Northern Ireland have monitored and managed consultants to date to ensure that they fulfil their commitments to the health service. Most consultants are highly committed and work beyond their contractual obligations. But, prior to the introduction of a new contract in 2004, the quality of timetabled work programmes in the trusts was poor, and there was little monitoring of compliance by consultants. This led to a lack of clarity and accountability in the relationship between the public and private practice of the consultants. The new contract is based on the overriding principle that a consultant's first and foremost commitment is to the health service patients, and provides the opportunity for the trusts to improve management of consultants. Part 2 of the report examines how successful trusts have been in recovering the full cost of services provided to patients receiving private care within the trusts' facilities, a useful additional income stream. There is evidence of slow recovery of costs from private insurers, and a lack of basic debtor controls to gather money owed for treatment received, which is not compatible with good governance and accountability. NIAO feels there is an urgent need for some trusts to improve their cost recovery systems so that the full potential of income generation is realised and the needs of accountability are satisfied.


A National Health Service?

A National Health Service?

Author: John Mohan

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing

Published: 1995-03-20

Total Pages: 307

ISBN-13: 134923897X

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This book contrasts the proposals of the Royal Commission of the late 1970s with the very different set of priorities enshrined in the 1989 White Paper and describes how the changes between the two documents came about. It argues that the NHS reforms should be seen not as the inevitable product of technical developments nor as a consensus response to narrowly managerial difficulties within the NHS, but rather as part of a wider political strategy towards state provision of welfare. The book strongly emphasises the uneven geographical impacts of post-1979 changes, a topic usually underplayed by analysts of social policy, and draws heavily on previously unpublished material.