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Book Review
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Volume 335:756-757 September 5, 1996 Number 10
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Who Should We Treat? Law, patients, and resources in the NHS

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By Christopher Newdick. 323 pp. New York, Oxford University Press, 1995. $74. ISBN 0-19-825924-7.

Every country's health system is in crisis. In the absence of clear "best practices," cynics might remark that reform usually consists of replacing one set of problems with a new set, and then beginning a new process of change. International comparisons have therefore become a popular pastime — both in the illusory quest for the right path and for the consolation of knowing that others have problems too. In the past, many Americans could look to Britain's National Health Service (NHS) in search of the "evils of socialized medicine"; scholars were, like the police chief in Casablanca, "shocked, shocked" to . . . [Full Text of this Article]




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