Halvorsen John G
Department of Family and Community Medicine, and associate dean for community health, University of Illinois College of Medicine, Peoria, Illinois 61602, USA.
Acad Med. 2008 May;83(5):425-31. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0b013e31816bddc4.
Primary care as an academic discipline and key component of the U.S. health care system faces a threatened future, despite numerous studies in the United States and cross-nationally that substantiate its health-promoting benefits. The United States remains the only Western industrialized nation that delivers primary care through three major disciplines rather than as a single specialty. This fragmented model may contribute to the fact that the United States does not have a primary-care-based health care system and that the U.S. population demonstrates poorer health outcomes than do those countries whose health systems are based on primary care and managed by a single primary care specialty. Fragmentation also creates confusion about primary care's identity, diminishes its influence because it does not speak with a common voice, and creates competition for academic and professional status, resources, curricular priority, research and training program funding, patients, and reimbursement. A large, single-specialty body of primary physicians could eliminate much duplication and competition and demonstrate greater political influence with academia, government agencies, insurers, and corporate America. A single specialty that incorporates the strengths of the three primary care disciplines would expand the clinical scope of primary care and could serve as a potent enabling force to lead health system reform. It would also produce measurable benefits for medical student and graduate medical education, health system design and service delivery, and primary care research. The author outlines a plan of action, involving all stakeholders, to initiate and achieve the single-specialty goal.
尽管美国国内以及跨国的大量研究都证实了初级保健具有促进健康的益处,但作为一门学科和美国医疗保健系统的关键组成部分,初级保健面临着充满危机的未来。美国仍然是唯一一个通过三大主要学科而非单一专科来提供初级保健的西方工业化国家。这种分散的模式可能导致美国没有一个以初级保健为基础的医疗保健系统,而且美国民众的健康状况比那些以初级保健为基础并由单一初级保健专科管理的国家的民众更差。分散还导致了对初级保健身份的混淆,由于缺乏统一的声音而削弱了其影响力,并在学术和专业地位、资源、课程优先级、研究和培训项目资金、患者以及报销等方面引发了竞争。一个大型的单一专科初级医师团体可以消除大量的重复和竞争,并在学术界、政府机构、保险公司和美国企业界展现出更大的政治影响力。一个融合了三个初级保健学科优势的单一专科将扩大初级保健的临床范围,并可以成为推动卫生系统改革的强大助力。这也将为医学生和毕业后医学教育、卫生系统设计与服务提供以及初级保健研究带来可衡量的益处。作者概述了一项行动计划,涉及所有利益相关者,以启动并实现单一专科的目标。