Publication | Closed Access
Primary Care And Health System Performance: Adults' Experiences In Five Countries
286
Citations
15
References
2004
Year
Family MedicineHealthcare ProvisionPrimary Care ExperiencesSafety ConcernsPrimary CarePublic HealthUniversal Health CareHealth Services ResearchHealth PolicyPrimary Health CareHealth Care DeliveryHealth SystemsHealth System PerformanceAdolescent Primary CareInternational HealthPatient SafetyNew ZealandGeneral PracticePatient-centered OutcomeMedicine
This paper reports on a 2004 survey of primary care experiences among adults in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States. The survey finds shortfalls in delivery of safe, effective, timely, or patient-centered care, with variations among countries. Delays in lab test results and test errors raise safety concerns. Failures to communicate, to engage patients, or to promote health are widespread. Aside from clinical preventive care, the United States performs poorly on most care dimensions in the study, with notable cost-related access concerns and short-term physician relationships. Contrasts across countries point to the potential to improve performance and to learn from international initiatives.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1