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Related Experiment Videos

Public perceptions. The generation claim.

S McIver1

  • 1Health Services Management Centre, Birmingham University.

The Health Service Journal
|February 24, 2001
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

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Public support for the National Health Service (NHS) among young people is not conclusively declining. Increased expectations, not reduced social solidarity, are more likely linked to current dissatisfaction with the NHS.

Area of Science:

  • Health policy
  • Public health
  • Sociology of health

Background:

  • A perceived decline in support for the National Health Service (NHS) among younger demographics has been noted.
  • Existing evidence regarding this trend is inconclusive, necessitating further investigation.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the evidence behind the perception of falling support for the NHS among the young.
  • To identify the primary drivers of any observed dissatisfaction with the NHS in this demographic.

Main Methods:

  • This study critically evaluates existing evidence and perceptions regarding youth support for the NHS.
  • Analysis focuses on correlating reported dissatisfaction with factors such as social solidarity and public expectations.

Main Results:

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  • The evidence does not conclusively support the notion that NHS support is falling among the young.
  • Findings suggest that increased public expectations of the NHS are a more probable cause of dissatisfaction than a decline in social solidarity.

Conclusions:

  • The perception of declining youth support for the NHS is not definitively proven by current evidence.
  • Addressing rising public expectations may be more crucial for maintaining satisfaction with the NHS than concerns about eroding social solidarity.