Abstract

Giving patients a greater say in the NHS is prominent in all national service frameworks (NSFs) and is evident in the expert patient initiative (Department of Health (DH), 2001a). One group of users who may have difficulty in making their voice heard are the elderly. The national service framework for older people (DH, 2001b) promotes user involvement in an attempt to achieve fair and equitable access to services for this group of patients who, statistically, make the highest use of the NHS and could be classified as consumers. This article, the last in a series on this topic, discusses whether a sample of older people in a village community have a consumerist ethos in regard to health care, and whether they are prepared to act in this way. Suggestions are made for better facilitating older people's involvement in and use of services.

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