The unfairness of place: A cultural history of the UK’s ‘postcode lottery’
Examination of the history of the UK’s ‘postcode lottery’
This presentation examines the emergence and evolution of the concept of the ‘postcode lottery’ in Britain during the 1980s-1990s and onwards. Its target audience are students and staff interested in the histories of health inequality in Modern Britain, as well as the broader relationship between healthcare, health inequalities, and place.
The ‘postcode lottery’ has become a dominant political framing device for discussions of place-based health inequalities in Britain, used by patient groups, politicians and in media coverage of regional health and healthcare inequalities. Using newspapers, parliamentary material and health policy documents, this paper traces how this term has changed and expanded over time, from its origins as a protest about access to new pharmaceutical treatments, to a broader commentary about geographical variations in the quality of NHS and other public services, health outcomes, and deprivation. It traces this emergence and evolution from its origins in the 1989-91 introduction of the ‘internal market’ and the 1994 reintroduction of the National Lottery, through to New Labour health reforms, the introduction of austerity, and the Levelling Up programme in the present day.
This paper finds that the term’s concern with unfairness has enabled its incorporation into a range of political positions, both as a defence of universalism against market-based reforms in the NHS, and to rationalise distinctions between ‘unequal’ and ‘unfair’ disparities in health outcomes. We conclude that understanding and addressing place-based differences and inequalities in health, healthcare, and health outcomes may be aided through investigation of cultural ideas and values as well as the deep histories of place and local services.
Speakers
Grace Redhead is a Research Fellow based in the at the University of Exeter. She is a historian of medicine and the modern British welfare state, currently researching chronic liver disease and regional health inequality in the NHS, alongside Dr Rebecca Lynch, as part of a collaborative project funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR). Her previous research explored the history of Sickle Cell Disease (SCD) in Britain, considering the shifting power of consumer groups within the NHS, and the impact of protest, advocacy and Black British political action in reconfiguring notions of citizenship.
Rebecca Lynch is a Lecturer in Medical Anthropology and the Anthropology of Science, based in the and at the University of Exeter. Alongside Grace Redhead, she is currently researching chronic liver disease and regional health inequality in the NHS as part of a collaborative project funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR). Her research draws on examples of different topics (often within biomedicine) to explore the dynamic, changing, fluid body and its boundaries, moral aspects of health and medicine, and (bio)medical categorisations (including those created through notions of risk and health technologies).
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