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Equity in health and social care

Equity in health and social care
Equity in health and social care
This paper studies equity in the distribution of primary health care and domiciliary care for elderly people. The main data source is the 1980 GHS which has been linked to local authority data. An equitably distributed service is defined as one in which only variables which measure respondent's need for the service provide a significant explanation of whether the respondent receives the service. In the case of primary health care we find that for a number of groups defined by gender and age, economic and demographic variables have significant explanatory power. For two groups (males under 41 and females between 40 and 60), need was the only significant variable. For domiciliary care not only are variables which relate to the respondent's demographic and economic status significant but also variables which are concerned with local authorities' policies concerning supply. In general neither service is distributed equitably in the sense defined.
0047-2794
489-523
Evandrou, Maria
cd2210ea-9625-44d7-b0f4-fc0721a25d28
Falkingham, Jane
8df36615-1547-4a6d-ad55-aa9496e85519
Le Grand, Julian
b5fd77bd-907d-4f1e-bbbf-fe628bcd504d
Winter, David
92974a5d-de18-4c26-8c6f-5bb7d98f401a
Evandrou, Maria
cd2210ea-9625-44d7-b0f4-fc0721a25d28
Falkingham, Jane
8df36615-1547-4a6d-ad55-aa9496e85519
Le Grand, Julian
b5fd77bd-907d-4f1e-bbbf-fe628bcd504d
Winter, David
92974a5d-de18-4c26-8c6f-5bb7d98f401a

Evandrou, Maria, Falkingham, Jane, Le Grand, Julian and Winter, David (1992) Equity in health and social care. Journal of Social Policy, 21 (4), 489-523. (doi:10.1017/S0047279400020158).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This paper studies equity in the distribution of primary health care and domiciliary care for elderly people. The main data source is the 1980 GHS which has been linked to local authority data. An equitably distributed service is defined as one in which only variables which measure respondent's need for the service provide a significant explanation of whether the respondent receives the service. In the case of primary health care we find that for a number of groups defined by gender and age, economic and demographic variables have significant explanatory power. For two groups (males under 41 and females between 40 and 60), need was the only significant variable. For domiciliary care not only are variables which relate to the respondent's demographic and economic status significant but also variables which are concerned with local authorities' policies concerning supply. In general neither service is distributed equitably in the sense defined.

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More information

Published date: October 1992

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 488534
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488534
ISSN: 0047-2794
PURE UUID: 6043ddf4-6974-4a99-9f75-cef3e7bf3c8d
ORCID for Maria Evandrou: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2115-9358
ORCID for Jane Falkingham: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7135-5875

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Date deposited: 26 Mar 2024 17:46
Last modified: 27 Mar 2024 02:39

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Contributors

Author: Maria Evandrou ORCID iD
Author: Jane Falkingham ORCID iD
Author: Julian Le Grand
Author: David Winter

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