Patel Mahomed S, Phillips Christine B, Pearce Christopher, Kljakovic Marjan, Dugdale Paul, Glasgow Nicholas
College of Medicine and Health Sciences, Australian National University, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia.
PLoS One. 2008 May 28;3(5):e2269. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0002269.
Although primary health care, and in particular, general practice will be at the frontline in the response to pandemic influenza, there are no frameworks to guide systematic planning for this task or to appraise available plans for their relevance to general practice. We aimed to develop a framework that will facilitate planning for general practice, and used it to appraise pandemic plans from Australia, England, USA, New Zealand and Canada.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We adapted the Haddon matrix to develop the framework, populating its cells through a multi-method study that incorporated the peer-reviewed and grey literature, interviews with general practitioners, practice nurses and senior decision-makers, and desktop simulation exercises. We used the framework to analyse 89 publicly-available jurisdictional plans at similar managerial levels in the five countries. The framework identifies four functional domains: clinical care for influenza and other needs, public health responsibilities, the internal environment and the macro-environment of general practice. No plan addressed all four domains. Most plans either ignored or were sketchy about non-influenza clinical needs, and about the contribution of general practice to public health beyond surveillance. Collaborations between general practices were addressed in few plans, and inter-relationships with the broader health system, even less frequently.
This is the first study to provide a framework to guide general practice planning for pandemic influenza. The framework helped identify critical shortcomings in available plans. Engaging general practice effectively in planning is challenging, particularly where governance structures for primary health care are weak. We identify implications for practice and for research.
尽管初级卫生保健,尤其是全科医疗将处于应对大流行性流感的前沿,但目前尚无框架来指导这项任务的系统规划,也没有框架来评估现有计划与全科医疗的相关性。我们旨在制定一个有助于全科医疗规划的框架,并利用该框架评估来自澳大利亚、英格兰、美国、新西兰和加拿大的大流行计划。
方法/主要发现:我们对哈顿矩阵进行了调整以制定该框架,通过一项多方法研究来填充其各个单元格,该研究纳入了同行评审文献和灰色文献、对全科医生、执业护士和高级决策者的访谈以及桌面模拟练习。我们使用该框架分析了五个国家类似管理层面的89份公开可用的辖区计划。该框架确定了四个功能领域:流感及其他需求的临床护理、公共卫生职责、内部环境以及全科医疗的宏观环境。没有一个计划涵盖所有四个领域。大多数计划要么忽略了非流感临床需求,要么对其描述粗略,并且对全科医疗在监测之外对公共卫生的贡献也描述甚少。很少有计划涉及全科医疗之间的合作,与更广泛卫生系统的相互关系涉及得更少。
这是第一项提供指导全科医疗大流行性流感规划框架的研究。该框架有助于识别现有计划中的关键缺陷。让全科医疗有效参与规划具有挑战性,尤其是在初级卫生保健治理结构薄弱的情况下。我们确定了对实践和研究的启示。