Publications by authors named "C B Lunan"

Background: Recent evidence demonstrates persistence of the inverse care law (ICL), with fewer GPs and less funding in more deprived areas.

Aim: To map out interventions that aimed to address the ICL and the rationale behind them, and to review the impact and sustainability of these interventions - what has worked, for whom, and why?

Method: The authors searched Embase, Web of Science, MEDLINE, CINAHL, Cochrane, and BASE from 2000 to 2022 for articles describing interventions or policies that aimed to address the ICL in general practice in Scotland. A systematic grey literature search of government, NHS, and third-sector websites was also performed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Scotland has an ageing population and the widest health inequalities in Western Europe. Multiple health conditions develop ∼10-15 years earlier in deprived areas than in affluent areas. General practice is central to the effective and safe management of such complex multiple health conditions, but the inverse care law has permeated deprived communities ('Deep End' general practices) for the past 50 years.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Scotland, like many countries around the world, has wide health inequalities resulting, in part, from the longstanding 'inverse care law', in which a mismatch between patient needs and provision of care in general practice in deprived areas results in poorer care and worse patient outcomes compared with affluent areas. In early 2018, Scotland embarked on a new GP contract, a stated aim of which was to reduce healthcare inequalities. National data on avoidable mortality showed a 4.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The COVID-19 pandemic affected healthcare systems worldwide, including the National Health Service (NHS). It drastically changed the practice and delivery of healthcare and laid bare longstanding structural flaws. It also brought a time of innovation and digitalisation and renewed appreciation of the role of public health.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The 'inverse care law' highlights the gap between healthcare needs and supply in deprived areas, leading to poor outcomes for patients and less job satisfaction for GPs.
  • GPs in high deprivation areas experience more job-related stress and lower satisfaction compared to those in wealthier areas.
  • Patients in these deprived regions also report dissatisfaction with access to services and consultation quality, indicating that this disparity continues in Scotland over 50 years after it was first identified.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF