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Equity, waiting times, and NHS reforms: retrospective study

Cooper, Zachary N., McGuire, Alistair ORCID: 0000-0002-5367-9841, Jones, S. and Le Grand, Julian ORCID: 0000-0002-7864-0118 (2009) Equity, waiting times, and NHS reforms: retrospective study. British Medical Journal, 339 (b3264). ISSN 0959-8138

Full text not available from this repository.
Identification Number: 10.1136/bmj.b3264

Abstract

Objective: To determine whether observable changes in waiting times occurred for certain key elective procedures between 1997 and 2007 in the English National Health Service and to analyse the distribution of those changes between socioeconomic groups as an indicator of equity. Design: Retrospective study of population-wide, patient level data using ordinary least squares regression to investigate the statistical relation between waiting times and patients’ socioeconomic status. Setting: English NHS from 1997 to 2007. Participants: 427 277 patients who had elective knee replacement, 406 253 who had elective hip replacement, and 2 568 318 who had elective cataract repair. Main outcome measures: Days waited from referral for surgery to surgery itself; socioeconomic status based on Carstairs index of deprivation. Results: Mean and median waiting times rose initially and then fell steadily over time. By 2007 variation in waiting times across the population tended to be lower. In 1997 waiting times and deprivation tended to be positively related. By 2007 the relation between deprivation and waiting time was less pronounced, and, in some cases, patients from the most deprived fifth were waiting less time than patients from the most advantaged fifth. Conclusions: Between 1997 and 2007 waiting times for patients having elective hip replacement, knee replacement, and cataract repair in England went down and the variation in waiting times for those procedures across socioeconomic groups was reduced. Many people feared that the government’s NHS reforms would lead to inequity, but inequity with respect to waiting times did not increase; if anything, it decreased. Although proving that the later stages of those reforms, which included patient choice, provider competition, and expanded capacity, was a catalyst for improvements in equity is impossible, the data show that these reforms, at a minimum, did not harm equity.

Item Type: Article
Official URL: http://www.bmj.com/
Additional Information: © 2009 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.
Divisions: Social Policy
LSE Health
Subjects: R Medicine > RA Public aspects of medicine
JEL classification: I - Health, Education, and Welfare > I1 - Health > I18 - Government Policy; Regulation; Public Health
Date Deposited: 28 Sep 2009 11:43
Last Modified: 12 Nov 2024 21:48
URI: http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/25295

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