Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures and tables
- Acknowledgements
- Notes on contributors
- Foreword
- one Introduction: managing the ‘unmanageable consumer’
- two The consumer and New Labour: the consumer as king?
- three Narratives of public service delivery in the UK: comparing central and local government
- four Understanding the ‘differentiated consumer’ in public services
- five Differentiating consumers in professional services: information, empowerment and the emergence of the fragmented consumer
- six The healthcare consumer
- seven The consumer in education
- eight The consumer and social housing
- nine The people’s police? Citizens, consumers and communities
- ten The consumer in social care
- eleven Differentiated consumers? A differentiated view from a service user perspective
- twelve Authoritative consumers or experts by experience? User groups in health and social care
- thirteen The public service consumer as member
- fourteen Conclusion: the consumer in public services
- Index
eleven - Differentiated consumers? A differentiated view from a service user perspective
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 January 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures and tables
- Acknowledgements
- Notes on contributors
- Foreword
- one Introduction: managing the ‘unmanageable consumer’
- two The consumer and New Labour: the consumer as king?
- three Narratives of public service delivery in the UK: comparing central and local government
- four Understanding the ‘differentiated consumer’ in public services
- five Differentiating consumers in professional services: information, empowerment and the emergence of the fragmented consumer
- six The healthcare consumer
- seven The consumer in education
- eight The consumer and social housing
- nine The people’s police? Citizens, consumers and communities
- ten The consumer in social care
- eleven Differentiated consumers? A differentiated view from a service user perspective
- twelve Authoritative consumers or experts by experience? User groups in health and social care
- thirteen The public service consumer as member
- fourteen Conclusion: the consumer in public services
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Discussion and developments relating to ‘the public service consumer’ have been constants of growing significance since the late 1970s. This chapter focuses on this issue from the perspectives of people as long-term users of health and social care services. This large group, which includes older and disabled people, mental health service users, people with learning difficulties and others, is one for whom the discourse about the consumer in public services has major ramifications. Yet this discourse is not one in which they can be said to have played a central part, albeit, as we shall see, that they have been enlisted as actors within it.
A key aim of this chapter is to explore both their responses to public service consumerism and the frameworks which they have employed in developing both their own individual and collective identities and actions in relation to public policy and services. I have described this contribution as from a ‘service user’ perspective because this is a crucial part of my perspective as the author. There is no suggestion that this is the only view that might be offered from a service user's perspective, although the discussion does draw on a wide range of service users’ views and discussions.
The role of social policy
A key concern of recent social policy, both in the UK and more generally, has been to develop a changed, more active relationship with welfare users. Yet, so far, social policy texts have had relatively little to say about welfare users. They have paid little (in some cases, no) attention to their perspectives and discourses. In some cases, though, these discourses are far advanced, for example in the case of the disabled people's movement. There is now a range of movements associated with welfare service users, including those of older people, mental health service users/survivors, people with learning difficulties, people living with HIV/AIDS.
Yet, if we take a range of widely used social policy textbooks, discussion of and references to service users, their movements and their critiques are generally very limited or non-existent. It was not until 2008 that the UK Social Policy Association specifically addressed the issue of welfare service users in its student's companion (Beresford, 2008).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Consumer in Public ServicesChoice, Values and Difference, pp. 197 - 218Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2009