Personal Budgets and Health: A Review of the Evidence
Wirrmann Gadsby E
Policy Research Unit in Commissioning and the Healthcare System, Centre for Health Services Studies, Kent.
2013
Project ID (Internal) | 52 |
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Project Status | completed |
Full Reference (text) | Wirrmann Gadsby E (2013) Personal Budgets and Health: a review of evidence. Policy Research Unit in Commissioning and the Healthcare System. [The report can be accessed here] |
Full Reference (URL) | http://blogs.lshtm.ac.uk/prucomm/2013/04/15/personal-budgets-and-health-a-review-of-the-evidence/ |
Summary / Abstract | The UK Government has committed to expanding the use of personal health budgets for health service users following the evaluation of the pilot programme which ran from 2009-2012. This is part of a wider ‘personalisation’ agenda, which has become a central theme in the reform of health and social care in England, and also features increasingly prominently in the policies of other UK governments, in addition to governments of many other developed countries around the world. A number of other countries around the world have experimented with various forms of personal budgets, although predominantly for the purchasing of care that, in the UK, would be described as social rather than health care. Programmes – and their contexts – vary enormously. There is no programme elsewhere that is directly comparable to personal health budgets in England. There is therefore no directly relevant evidence from which we might extrapolate. However, this review collates evidence on those various programmes in order to examine the case for investing further in personal health budgets. It incorporates the findings of the recently published final report of the evaluation of the personal health budget pilot in England |
Publication Title | Personal Budgets and Health: A Review of the Evidence |
Author(s) | Wirrmann Gadsby E |
Publication Details | Policy Research Unit in Commissioning and the Healthcare System, Centre for Health Services Studies, Kent. |
Publication Year / End of Project | 2013 |
Last Accessed | 03/01/2019 12:00 am |
NIHR School for
Social Care Research