Publication | Closed Access
Organisational capacity and chronic disease care: an Australian general practice perspective.
30
Citations
5
References
2007
Year
Family MedicineHealth Care ManagementMultidisciplinary CarePrimary CareChronic Disease ManagementSuboptimal CareChronic Disease CarePublic HealthHealth Services ResearchIntegrated CareChronic IllnessHealth PolicyAustralian General PracticeChronic Disease PreventionNursingHealth ManagementGeneral PracticePatient ManagementMedicineOrganisational CapacityHealth Informatics
Although we are rapidly improving our understanding of how to manage patients with chronic illness in Australian general practice, many patients are still receiving suboptimal care. General practices have limited organisational capacity to provide the structured care that is required for managing chronic conditions: regular monitoring, decision support, patient recall, supporting patient self management, team work, and information management. This requires a shift away from episodic, acute models. Overseas research has shown that areas such as team work, clinical information systems, decision support, linkages and leadership are also important in managing chronic illness, but we do not know which of these are most important in Australia.
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