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Towards a joined-up health service
Mark Gould, The Guardian, 01/09/2010
NHS joint-working must be encouraged, says Nuffield Trust
David Williams, Public Finance, 01/09/2010
Andrew Lansley's £80bn adventure
Michael White, The Guardian, 13/07/2010
Financial control devolved to GPs in huge NHS reform 'gamble'
Jeremy Laurance, The Independent, 13/07/2010
Recent Articles
Commissioning needs to be reborn, not killed off
Dr Judith Smith, HSJ, 29/04/2010
Viewpoint - Commissioning unjustly damned
Dr Judith Smith, Healthcare Republic, 22/04/2010
Can the NHS cut costs without substantially damaging the quality of health care? Yes
Rebecca Rosen, BMJ, 14/04/2010
The social policies we want from a new government
The Guardian, 07/04/2010
Recent Publications
Removing the policy barriers to integrated care in England
The Coalition Government's NHS reforms: an assessment of the White Paper
Trends in emergency admissions in England 2004 - 2009
Trends in emergency admissions in England 2004 – 2009: is greater efficiency breeding inefficiency?
Author:Adrian O’Dowd
Date:14/07/2008 00:00:00
Organisation:BMJ
Extract:
The four national governments in the United Kingdom need to work far more closely and to coordinate formally over health issues or face growing conflict, a major report says.
Since 1999, devolution has meant ever widening differences in health policy between the four countries, and lack of coordination will damage all four healthcare systems, warns the report by the health policy think tank the Nuffield Trust.
Its report says that extensive overlaps and complexities have arisen since devolution was agreed, leading to "messy intergovernmental relations." Its findings are drawn from research and extensive interviews carried out over the past seven years
A basic problem, says the report, is that the current systems for identifying and resolving conflicts are informal and rely on a level of political goodwill that cannot be guaranteed to last.
The Joint Ministerial Committee, which was set up specifically to manage relations between the four countries and ...
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