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Accessing Healthcare: Responding to diversity


Accessing Healthcare: Responding to diversity

Hardback by Healy, Judith (, Director, Social Protection Facility, Research School of Social Sciences, The Australian National University, Canberra, Australia); McKee, Martin (, Professor of European Public Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK)

Accessing Healthcare: Responding to diversity

£167.50

ISBN:
9780198516187
Publication Date:
8 Jan 2004
Language:
English
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Pages:
400 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 7 - 12 May 2024
Accessing Healthcare: Responding to diversity

Description

Health care systems in developed countries must respond to increasingly diverse populations given greater population movements as a result of globalization. We all share a common humanity yet we each have different health care needs, depending on whether we are young or old, men or women, rich or poor, disabled or able-bodied, from different ethnic and indigenous groups, or citizens or asylum-seekers. Our membership of these societal groups shapes to some extent our health needs and our use of health services. But policy-makers and professionals often seem blind to this diversity. Some groups make special claims upon the state and have different expectations regarding health care. What are the barriers to people receiving equitable health care? Should mainstream services be made more responsive to the needs of different people, or is it necessary to set up alternative health care services? The chapters in this book discuss countries and population groups that illustrate different responses to claimant groups and different ways of delivering health services. For the first time this book brings draws together examples of how to deal with diversity from health systems across the industrialized world. It considers population groups within countries and takes a broad approach, studying inherent population diversity (age, sex), citizen issues (migrants, asylum seekers) and ethnic and indigenous groups (multiculturalism in the UK, Roma in Europe, New Zealand Maori, Australian Aborigines). It identifies barriers to accessing health care services by diverse populations and cultural groups within different countries and considers the advantages and disadvantages of different delivery models for different population groups. This book provides an unparalleled breadth of perspectives from which to draw conclusions about how to meet the needs of societies characterised by diversity.

Contents

Foreword ; Preface ; 1. Different people, different services? ; 2. Sex and gender in health care and health policy ; 3. Services for older people ; 4. Meeting the needs of people with disabilities ; 5. Health care for rich and poor alike ; 6. Access and equity in Australian rural health services ; 7. Captive populations: prison health care ; 8. New citizens: East Germans in a united Germany ; 9. Overseas citizens: citoyens de France ; 10. Migrants: universal health services in Sweden ; 11. Asylum seekers and refugees in the United Kingdom ; 12. Multicultural health care in Britain ; 13. Roma health: problems and perception ; 14. 'On our terms': the politics of Aboriginal health in Australia ; 15. Maori in Aotearoa/New Zealand ; 16. The history and politics of health care for Native Americans ; 17. The value and challenges of separate services: First Nation in Canada ; 18. Delivering Health services in diverse societies

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