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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 14 page paper looks at the National Health Services in the UK and considers the way it may be assessed, looking at issues such as affordability, quality, access and accountability that are found within the NHS. The bibliography cites 14 sources.
Page Count:
14 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TS14_TEassnhs.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
conservative government in 2010 there have been further announcements made to indicate major structural changes that will take place at a cost of ?1.7 billion, with the ultimate aim of
decreasing the long term running costs of the NHS (Triggle, 2010). Therefore it may be argued that one of the measures that is being used of the healthcare service in
the UK is one of cost, which also links to efficiency. However, this is not a primary measure, and this, along with previous changes need to assess other aspects of
the service which include issues such as accessibility, quality of service as well as cost. To assess the quality and service delivery of the NHS it is necessary to
consider the background and performance and then consider models or frameworks that may be used to assess the service, examining the performance and presentation of the service rather than simply
describing its structure and operation. The history of the NHS begins in 1945 as part of the new government of the post
war years Minister of Health Aneurin Bevan was responsible for the development and introduction of the National Health Service (NHS). However, with the polices and feeling ion the country there
probably would still have been a National Health Service without him, but he also shaped the way it developed (Portillo, 1998). The
major principle of the health service was that there should be health care for all, regardless of class or income, the principle of universal healthcare was established. Bevans ,main influence
was not the innovation of the NHS, but the way in which it was set up and operated. The first aspect of this was that in nationalising all the hospitals
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