Abstract
General Practitioner fundholding has been shown to enjoy a number
of
advantages over centralised systems of purchasing: it is more consumer
sensitive, shakes up providers, shifts resources into primary care, enables
expert understanding and skills to inform the purchasing function and
ensures that treatment quality will have priority over cost savings. These
benefits are offset by the very significant drawbacks of extra resources
being needed for administration, limitations on purchaser power and the
danger that the internal market principle will be undermined.This article examines the extent to which these effects are applicable
in
the specific context of purchasing of community nursing services that
took effect from April 1993. It is found that few of the above advantages
are applicable in the community setting and that the disadvantages are
particularly severe. The solution may be to combine formal centralised
contracting with an element of competition at the operational level to
produce a more ‘organic’ system than hitherto visualised.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Public Administration,Social Sciences (miscellaneous)
Cited by
3 articles.
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