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FAMILY MEDICINE IN EUROPE. Prof. Igor Švab,MD, PhD, FRCGP President Wonca Europe. CONTENT. Why is family medicine important Examples of good and bad primary care Some examples from Europe Future challenges for Wonca. IS FAMILY MEDICINE IMPORTANT?.
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FAMILY MEDICINE IN EUROPE Prof. Igor Švab,MD, PhD, FRCGP President Wonca Europe
CONTENT • Why is family medicine important • Examples of good and bad primary care • Some examples from Europe • Future challenges for Wonca
IS FAMILY MEDICINE IMPORTANT? If primary care has anything at all to do with improving health, then its contribution will be measurable. If not, it will be accepted as the homeopathy of modern medicine. Horton R. Is primary-care resarch a lost cause? Lancet 2003, 361: 977
OVERVIEW OF THE EVIDENCE • The strength of a country’s primary care system is associated with improved population health outcomes • Health systems with a strong primary care orientation tend to be more equitable and accessible • Using primary care physicians reduces costs and increases patient satisfaction with no adverse effects on patient outcomes
FAMILY MEDICINE AND PRIMARY CARE IN EUROPE • Diversity of cultures, religions, economies pollitical systems, health care systems, policies and practices • There is no one ideal system, there are only principles
SOME EUROPEAN PRINCIPLES • Equity • Solidarity • Acessibility • Patient participation
Teamwork Community oriented primary care Family medicine Solo practice Centralistic planning Policlinics Open access to specialist care WHAT WORKS AND WHAT DOESN’T IN PRIMARY CARE
SOME CONTEXTS IN EUROPE • Developed systems • Liberal systems • Post-Soviet systems • Post-Yugoslav systems
DEVELOPED COMPLEX SYSTEMS • General practice is well developed, recognised and regulated • A complex contract between the state and family medicine • Main challenges: • to survive the increasing pressure • To maintain a leading role
LIBERAL SYSTEMS • Family medicine liberal, but not recognised • State important payer • Not very well regulated profession • Main challenges: • recognition • organisation
THE POST-SOVIET SYSTEMS • No recognition, low esteem • Based on policlinics • Largely abandoned, but still predominant in a lot of Eastern European countries • Main challenges: • how to change • resorces and know-how
THE POST YUGOSLAV SYSTEMS • Family medicine officially recognised • A theoretically amost perfect system, based on primary health centres • Main challenges: • How to develop further • resources
WHAT CAN WONCA DO? • Exchange of knowledge (congresses, journal etc.) • Work with other organisations (WHO, EU, European forum for primary care) • Advocacy of the discipline on the international level • Promotion and support of national colleges
USUAL COMPLAINTS FROM COLLEGES • Injustice: we are not properly recognised, we can not publish or get research funds due to injust criteria, we can not reach decision makers • Stupidity of others: Nobody understands us, our discipline is complex and difficult
The 4 traditional beliefs • Describing the discipline in its complexity is important • Family medicine is different from other disciplines • Defining boundaries around the discipline is important • We must protect ourselves
Is describing the complexity of the discipline important? • Models are useful and have made us realise the importance of the discipline. • But they have generally not been translated in a language that users would understand. • Promotion of the discipline among users was often lacking. • Theory may be useful to us, but is generally of no use to the public
Are we so different? • This argument was often used to give us a worse position towards other disciplines. • Family medicine is one of the many disciplines in medicine. • It deserves equal rights in terms of training, research funding, publishing, participation and policy decisions.
Is defining boundaries so important? • Defining boundaries is difficult and sometimes problematic in a multidisciplinary system. • The cooperation between the disciplines is more important than the division among them. • There is a lot other disciplines in medicine can learn from family medicine (e.g. education).
Must we protect ourselves? • Family medicine is important because of its impact on health. • Its users are its strongest allies. • Blaming others will do little to win the hearts and minds of sceptics.
SUGGESTIONS • Advertise successes (journals, meetings, media) • Do not be afraid to cooperate with other disciplines on equal terms • Work with patients and think about their perspective • Stop complaining
CONCLUSION Starfield B. Quality management in primary care – an European approach. Berlin, 2005