Sláintecare – A ten-year plan to achieve universal healthcare in Ireland

2018 
Abstract In May 2017, an Irish cross-party parliamentary committee published the ‘Houses of the Oireachtas Committee on the Future of Healthcare “Slaintecare” report’. The report, known as ‘Slaintecare’, is unique and historic as it is the first time there has been a cross-party political consensus on major health reform in Ireland. Slaintecare sets out a high level policy roadmap to deliver whole system reform and universal healthcare, phased over a ten year period and costed. Slaintecare details reform proposals which, if delivered, will establish; a universal, single-tier health service where patients are treated solely on the basis of health need; the reorientation of the health system ‘towards integrated primary and community care, consistent with the highest quality of patient safety in as short a time-frame as possible’. Slaintecare has five interrelated components: population health; entitlements and access to healthcare; integrated care; funding; and implementation. In this article, the authors use documents in the public domain (parliamentary reports, public hearings, submissions to the Committee, media coverage, the final report of the Committee, speeches by Committee members) to describe the policy process and the main contents of the proposed Slaintecare reforms. It is too soon tell if the political consensus in the policy formation can hold for its implementation.
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