Top Menu

  • GitHub
  • Midlands Analyst Network and Huddles
  • SU Insights
  • Sign up for updates
The Strategy Unit

Main navigation

  • About Us
  • Our work
  • Services
  • Contact
  • Training
  • GitHub
  • Midlands Analyst Network and Huddles
  • SU Insights
  • Sign up for updates
  1. Home

Our work

  • Show all
  • Primary, community and social care services
  • Inequalities
  • Elective / planned care
  • Maternity services and child health
  • Wider determinants of health and prevention
  • Urgent and emergency care
  • (-) Mental health
  • Specialised services
  • Better use of analysis and decision making
  • System thinking and system working
  • (-) MDSN
  • (-) Show all
  • Comparative analysis
  • Complex modelling
  • Problem structuring
  • (-) Show all
  • Report
  • Show all
  • Abeda Mulla
  • Alison Turner
  • Andrew Jones
  • Andy Hood
  • David Callaghan
  • David Frith
  • Fraser Battye
  • (-) Jake Parsons
  • Justine Wiltshire
  • Mohammed Amin Mohammed
  • Paul Mason
  • Paul Seamer
  • Peter Spilsbury
  • Rachel Caswell
  • Richard Ward
  • Shiona Aldridge
  • Simon Bourne
  • Steven Wyatt
  • Strategy Unit
  • Thomas Jemmett
10 min review
Report 12/05/2021

Socio-economic inequalities in access to planned hospital care: causes and consequences

Tacking inequalities in health is a long-standing NHS policy objective. Variation in the experiences and outcomes of different communities during the COVID-19 pandemic served to bring this issue back into focus.

Black pregnant Woman
Report 11/09/2020

Accessibility of perinatal mental health services for women from Ethnic Minority groups

Barriers to accessing mental health care during pregnancy and the first postnatal year (perinatal period) seem to be greater for ethnic minority women.

The Strategy Unit
NHS Logo

Quick Links

  • COVID-19
  • Publications
  • News and Views
  • Contact
  • Cookies
  • Privacy
  • Accessibility statement

The Strategy Unit 

Copyright © 2025 | Website design by NHS Midlands and Lancashire / NHS Arden and Greater East Midlands.

Accessibility

100%
100%
Scroll to top