Configuring the hospital in the 21st century
Publication year: 2004
In this policy brief, we will take a fresh look
at the hospital, and examine the questions
that policy-makers need to be asking about
its role in the health care system.
Although most health care takes places
outside hospitals, for most people, they have
come to symbolize the health care system.
The capacity of a health care system is often
measured by the number of hospitals or hospital beds. Yet these measures tell us almost
nothing. A “hospital” may have only a handful of beds, a staff with only basic skills and
no infrastructure – even no electricity or running water in some parts of the former Soviet Union. Or it may have hundreds of beds, a
highly trained staff and sophisticated equipment, operating theatres and laboratories.