Redressing or entrenching social and health inequities through policy implementation? Examining personalised budgets through the Australian National Disability Insurance Scheme

Abstract Background Increasing attention is being given to political agenda setting for the social determinants of health. While designing policies that can improve the social determinants of health is critical, so too is ensuring these policies are appropriately administered and implemented. Many p...

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Main Authors: Gemma Carey, Eleanor Malbon, Daniel Reeders, Anne Kavanagh, Gwynnyth Llewellyn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-11-01
Series:International Journal for Equity in Health
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12939-017-0682-z
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spelling doaj-4b5629f8424848df827011794cd5765f2020-11-25T00:42:40ZengBMCInternational Journal for Equity in Health1475-92762017-11-0116111210.1186/s12939-017-0682-zRedressing or entrenching social and health inequities through policy implementation? Examining personalised budgets through the Australian National Disability Insurance SchemeGemma Carey0Eleanor Malbon1Daniel Reeders2Anne Kavanagh3Gwynnyth Llewellyn4Centre for Public Service Research, UNSW CanberraCentre for Public Service Research, UNSW CanberraCentre for Public Service Research, UNSW CanberraSchool of Population Health, University of MelbourneCentre for Disability Research and Policy, University of SydneyAbstract Background Increasing attention is being given to political agenda setting for the social determinants of health. While designing policies that can improve the social determinants of health is critical, so too is ensuring these policies are appropriately administered and implemented. Many policies have the potential to entrench or even expand inequities during implementation. At present little attention has been given to this in the social determinants of health literature. There is an international trend in the personalisation of funding for care services, from the National Health Service in the England to the Brukerstyrt Personlig Assistanse in Norway. Part of this trend is the Australian National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS). The NDIS has the potential to secure gains in health for hundreds of thousands of Australians living with a disability. However, policies are only as good as their implementation. Methods As part of a longitudinal study on the implementation of the Australian NDIS, we conducted a systematic document search of policy documents pertaining to the Scheme on the websites of government departments with auspice over the design and implementation of the scheme with the aim of examining issues of equity. Results and discussion Scheme architects have argued that the NDIS has the potential to replace a piecemeal and fragmented set of state-determined services with an empowering model of user choice and control. However, without careful attention to both existing inequities and, diversity and difference across populations (e.g. different disability types and different localities), market based approaches such as the NDIS have the serious potential to entrench or even widen inequities. Conclusions The research concluded that ‘personalisation’ approaches can widen inequities and inequalities unless careful consideration is given at both policy design and implementation stages.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12939-017-0682-z
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gemma Carey
Eleanor Malbon
Daniel Reeders
Anne Kavanagh
Gwynnyth Llewellyn
spellingShingle Gemma Carey
Eleanor Malbon
Daniel Reeders
Anne Kavanagh
Gwynnyth Llewellyn
Redressing or entrenching social and health inequities through policy implementation? Examining personalised budgets through the Australian National Disability Insurance Scheme
International Journal for Equity in Health
author_facet Gemma Carey
Eleanor Malbon
Daniel Reeders
Anne Kavanagh
Gwynnyth Llewellyn
author_sort Gemma Carey
title Redressing or entrenching social and health inequities through policy implementation? Examining personalised budgets through the Australian National Disability Insurance Scheme
title_short Redressing or entrenching social and health inequities through policy implementation? Examining personalised budgets through the Australian National Disability Insurance Scheme
title_full Redressing or entrenching social and health inequities through policy implementation? Examining personalised budgets through the Australian National Disability Insurance Scheme
title_fullStr Redressing or entrenching social and health inequities through policy implementation? Examining personalised budgets through the Australian National Disability Insurance Scheme
title_full_unstemmed Redressing or entrenching social and health inequities through policy implementation? Examining personalised budgets through the Australian National Disability Insurance Scheme
title_sort redressing or entrenching social and health inequities through policy implementation? examining personalised budgets through the australian national disability insurance scheme
publisher BMC
series International Journal for Equity in Health
issn 1475-9276
publishDate 2017-11-01
description Abstract Background Increasing attention is being given to political agenda setting for the social determinants of health. While designing policies that can improve the social determinants of health is critical, so too is ensuring these policies are appropriately administered and implemented. Many policies have the potential to entrench or even expand inequities during implementation. At present little attention has been given to this in the social determinants of health literature. There is an international trend in the personalisation of funding for care services, from the National Health Service in the England to the Brukerstyrt Personlig Assistanse in Norway. Part of this trend is the Australian National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS). The NDIS has the potential to secure gains in health for hundreds of thousands of Australians living with a disability. However, policies are only as good as their implementation. Methods As part of a longitudinal study on the implementation of the Australian NDIS, we conducted a systematic document search of policy documents pertaining to the Scheme on the websites of government departments with auspice over the design and implementation of the scheme with the aim of examining issues of equity. Results and discussion Scheme architects have argued that the NDIS has the potential to replace a piecemeal and fragmented set of state-determined services with an empowering model of user choice and control. However, without careful attention to both existing inequities and, diversity and difference across populations (e.g. different disability types and different localities), market based approaches such as the NDIS have the serious potential to entrench or even widen inequities. Conclusions The research concluded that ‘personalisation’ approaches can widen inequities and inequalities unless careful consideration is given at both policy design and implementation stages.
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12939-017-0682-z
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