Health Services Act 1980
The Health Services Act 1980 (c. 53) is an act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom that reorganised the administration of the National Health Service in England and Wales. The Act abolished all area health authorities (AHAs) in 1982 and replaced them with 192 district health authorities (DHAs).[1] It also repealed the provisions that had been introduced in the National Health Service Act 1977 which sought to remove paid private treatment from NHS hospitals.[2] BackgroundA Royal Commission on the National Health Service was established in 1975 and published its report in July 1979. It heard complaints that the AHAs created under the National Health Service Reorganisation Act 1973 added an extra and unnecessary tier of management.[3] Although the 1973 Act had established a two-tier system of AHAs and RHAs, there was, in effect, a third lower administrative tier as the work of hospital management was done at district general hospital level.[4] The 'Patients First' consultation document was published in December 1979 which largely agreed with recommendations made by the Royal Commission to reduce the number of administrative tiers.[1] EffectsIn 1982, the 90 AHAs were abolished and replaced by 192 DHAs under the Health Services Act 1980, but the RHAs remained.[1] DHAs were established centred on district hospitals, and not necessarily aligned to local authority boundaries as the 90 AHAs had been.[1] Just as the AHAs had done, each DHA worked alongside a family practitioner committee (replaced by family health services authorities in 1990), which was responsible for managing primary care services such as general practice, pharmacy and dentistry.[5] The 1980 Act also repealed the provisions relating to pay beds introduced under the previous Labour government in the National Health Service Act 1977.[2] Subsequent reorganisationsFamily practitioner committees were replaced by family health services authorities (FHSAs) under the National Health Service and Community Care Act 1990. The 1990 Act also created NHS trusts and altered the roles of DHAs and local authorities to create an internal market.[6] The DHAs were reorganised on a number of occasions in the 1990s, and in 1996, new single-tier health authorities replaced both DHAs and FHSAs as a result of the Health Authorities Act 1995.[7] References
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