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International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

FAMILY MEDICINE IN EUROPE

Prof. Igor Švab,MD, PhD, FRCGP

President Wonca Europe

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

CONTENT

• What is family medicine

• Why is it important

• Its position in Europe

• Trends and challenges

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

WHAT IS FAMILY MEDICINE?

• General practice/family medicine is an academic and scientific discipline with its own educational content, research, evidence base and clinical activity, and a clinical specialty orientated to primary care

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

CHARACTERISTICS

a. First contact for all health problemsb. Coordination of care and advocacy of the patientc. Person centred approachd. Doctor-patient relationshipe. Longitudinal continuityf. Decision making, which takes into account prevalence of disease in

communityg. Simultaneous management of acute and chronic problemsh. Dealing with diseases in early and undifferentiated stagesi. Promotion of health and wellbeing j. Addressing health issues that are relevant to the communityk. Taking into account bio-psycho-social and existential dimensions of

the disease

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

COMPETENCES

1. To manage complaints in primary care

2. To be person centred in delivering care

3. To apply specific problem solving skills

4. To use comprehensive approach

5. To be orientated towards community

6. To use holistic modelling

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

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

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

EPIDEMIOLOGY

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

HEALTH OUTCOMES

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

HEALTH OUTCOMES

• 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

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

TRENDS

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

INCREASING COMPLEXITY

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

NEW TECHNOLOGIES

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

PATIENT PARTICIPATION

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

ADMINISTRATIVE LIMITATIONS

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

WORKLOAD

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

BURNOUT

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

THE POSITION OF FAMILY MEDICINE IN EUROPE

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

EUROPEAN REALITY

• Diversity of cultures• Diversity of religions• Diversity of economies• Diversity of pollitical

systems• Diversity of health care

systems• Diversity of policies• Diversity of practices

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

SUCCESS CRITERIA

• Is family medicine recognised as a discipline?

• Is there an university department?

• Are there any reforms taking place

• What is their success

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

MAIN MODELS IN EUROPE

• Regulated model• Liberal model• Salaried system• Semashko model• Yugoslav model

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

REGULATED MODEL

• General practice is well developed and recognised

• A complex contract between the payer and the GP

• State as the main payer• Regulated profession

(accreditation, vocational training)

• Mostly group practices

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

LIBERAL MODEL

• Family medicine struggling for recognition

• State important payer• Not very well

regulated profession• Solo practices

common

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

SALARIED SYSTEM

• Recognition variable• GPs paid by the

health centre• Very regulated

profession• Health centres as the

predominant organisational form

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

THE SEMASHKO MODEL

• No recognition• Salaried GPs with low

esteem• Based on policlinics• Largely abandoned,

but still predominant in a lot of Eastern European countries

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

YUGOSLAV MODEL OF HEALTH CARE

• Family medicine officially recognised as discipline, not always academic

• Based on primary health centres

• Reestablishment of family medicine, a lot of reforms with variable results

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

OVERVIEW

• Europe is bigger than it seems

• The variability of countries outside EU is much bigger than within EU

• The development of Europe towards East will give new challenges and oportunities

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

THE ROLE OF WONCA

• Exchange of knowledge (congresses, journal etc.)

• Work with other organisations (WHO, EU)• Advocacy of the discipline on the

international level• Promotion and support of national

colleges

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

USUAL COMPLAINTS

• 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

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

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

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

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.

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

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.

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

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 us.

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

Must we protect ourselves?

• Family medicine is important because of its impact on health.

• We must think about users, because they are our strongest allies.

• Blaming others will do little to win the hearts and minds of sceptics.

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

WE SHOULD ALSO

• Advertise our discipline

• Cooperate with other disciplines

• Work more with patients

• Stop complaining

International Symposium on General Practice / Family Medicine

Prague, March 9 - 11, 2006

Starfield B. Quality management in primary care – an European approach. Berlin, 2005

CONCLUSION

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