Better ways of assessing health needs in primary care

Abstract
One of the more widely welcomed aspects of the NHS reforms was the requirement that health authorities' decisions on how to use NHS resources should in future be based on a systematic assessment of each local population's needs for health care. This is meant to take account of local demography, the epidemiology of health problems, evidence on the effectiveness of treatments, and the preferences of local people.1 Needs assessment has become an important task for public health doctors and others working in commissioning authorities. This more rational and scientific method is put forward as an improvement over the former approach to allocating health funding, caricatured as “same as last year, plus or minus five per cent for pressure groups.”2