BMC Public Health (Jun 2019)

Personalisation schemes in social care: are they growing social and health inequalities?

  • Eleanor Malbon,
  • Gemma Carey,
  • Ariella Meltzer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-019-7168-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Background The connection between choice, control and health is well established in the literature on the social determinants of health, which includes choice and control of vital health and social services. However, even in the context of universal health and social care schemes, the ability to exercise choice and control can be distributed unequally. This paper uses the case of the Australian National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) to examine these issues. The NDIS is a major policy reform based on an international trend towards personalisation in social care. It aims to increase choice and control over services and supports for people who have or acquire a permanent disability, thereby boosting citizen empowerment and improving health and social outcomes. Methods The research is a structured review of empirical evidence on the administration and outcomes of the NDIS to identify how social factors constrain or enable the ability of individuals to exercise choice within personalised care schemes. Results We show how social determinants of health at the individual level can collide with the complexity of policy delivery systems to entrench health inequalities. Conclusion Many social policy reforms internationally focus on improving empowerment through enabling choice and control. However, if administrative systems do not take account of existing structural inequities, then such schemes are likely to entrench or grow social inequality. Our research indicates that more attention must be given to the design of policy delivery systems for personalisation schemes to ensure health equity.

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