Content area

Abstract

Hart's original paper, introducing the inverse care law, was not a systematic review of evidence but a polemic describing the effect of market forces on health care. Then, as now, there was less evidence than one might expect. Although commercial solutions to health-care problems are still a threat to public-health equity, this is no longer the most important formulation of the inverse care law in the UK. As affluent groups accrue the public-health benefits of effective clinical interventions, the perverse effect of evidence-based medicine will be to increase inequalities in health. A major stumbling block to progress is the absence of routine and research data quantifying the added costs of clinical effectiveness in deprived areas. Until this work is done, deprived areas will continue to lose out in NHS resource distribution formulas.

Details

Title
The inverse care law today
Author
Watt, Graham
Pages
252-4
Publication year
2002
Publication date
Jul 20, 2002
Publisher
Elsevier Limited
ISSN
01406736
e-ISSN
1474547X
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
199019388
Copyright
Copyright Lancet Ltd. Jul 20, 2002