Abstract :
The English government has given a commitment to improving access
to health care services for particular groups perceived as being under-served, or
served inappropriately, by existing services. In this article four examples of
policies aimed at improving access are considered: enhancing the supply of
services to under-served areas, changing the organization of services, setting
targets to improve access, and empowering people to make choices. Policies
aimed at improving access will work only if they address the source of inequities,
which means identifying the key barriers to access and these barriers are unlikely
to be uniform across sectors, services, and groups of people. Evidence on the
success of these four types of intervention in terms of influencing access and
equity of access is discussed, borrowing some concepts from the sociological
literature that enable us to understand the importance of how barriers to access
may arise for different services and different population groups. It is clear that
some policies may not work as well as we would hope, or may even exacerbate
inequities of access, because they fail to recognize the source of the particular
barriers faced by some groups.