A plea for an initiative to strengthen family medicine in public health care services of developing countries.
Int J Health Serv
; 32(4): 799-815, 2002.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-12456126
An analysis of standards for the best practice of family medicine in Northern European countries provides a framework for identifying the difficulties and deficiencies in the health services of developing countries, and offers strategies and criteria for improving primary health care practice. Besides well-documented socioeconomic and political problems, poor quality of care is an important factor in the weaknesses of health services. In particular, a patient-centered perspective in primary care practice is barely reflected in the medical curriculum of developing countries. Instead, public sector general practitioners are required to concentrate on preventive programs that tackle a few well-defined diseases and that tend to be dominated by quantitative objectives, at the expense of individually tailored prevention and treatment. Reasons for this include training oriented to hospital medicine and aspects of GPs' social status and health care organization that have undermined motivation and restricted change. A range of strategies is urgently required, including training to improve both clinical skills and aspects of the doctor-patient interaction. More effective government health policies are also needed. Co-operation agencies can contribute by granting political protection to public health centers and working to orient the care delivered at this level toward patient-centered medicine.
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Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Assunto principal:
Atenção Primária à Saúde
/
Administração em Saúde Pública
/
Benchmarking
/
Países em Desenvolvimento
/
Medicina de Família e Comunidade
Tipo de estudo:
Guideline
/
Prognostic_studies
Limite:
Humans
País como assunto:
Europa
Idioma:
En
Ano de publicação:
2002
Tipo de documento:
Article