Indigenous Eye Health Unit, Melbourne School of Population Health, The University of Melbourne, Level 5, 207 Bouverie Street, Carlton, Melbourne, VIC 3010, Australia.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2013 Jul 3;13:255. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-13-255.
Indigenous adults suffer six times more blindness than other Australians but 94% of this vision loss is unnecessary being preventable or treatable. We have explored the barriers and solutions to improve Indigenous eye health and proposed significant system changes required to close the gap for Indigenous eye health. This paper aims to identify the local co-ordination and case management requirements necessary to improve eye care for Indigenous Australians.
A qualitative study, using semi-structured interviews, focus groups, stakeholder workshops and meetings was conducted in community, private practice, hospital, non-government organisation and government settings. Data were collected at 21 sites across Australia. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 289 people working in Indigenous health and eye care; focus group discussions with 81 community members; stakeholder workshops involving 86 individuals; and separate meetings with 75 people. 531 people participated in the consultations. Barriers and issues were identified through thematic analysis and policy solutions developed through iterative consultation.
Poorly co-ordinated eye care services for Indigenous Australians are inefficient and costly and result in poorer outcomes for patients, communities and health care providers. Services are more effective where there is good co-ordination of services and case management of patients along the pathway of care. The establishment of clear pathways of care, development local and regional partnerships to manage services and service providers and the application of sufficient workforce with clear roles and responsibilities have the potential to achieve important improvements in eye care.
Co-ordination is a key to close the gap in eye care for Indigenous Australians. Properly co-ordinated care and support along the patient pathway through case management will save money by preventing dropout of patients who haven't received treatment and a successfully functioning system will encourage more people to enter for care.
原住民成年人失明的几率比其他澳大利亚人高六倍,但其中 94%的视力丧失是不必要的,可以预防或治疗。我们已经探讨了改善原住民眼健康的障碍和解决方案,并提出了为缩小原住民眼健康差距所需的重大系统变革。本文旨在确定改善原住民眼保健所需的本地协调和病例管理要求。
在社区、私人诊所、医院、非政府组织和政府环境中进行了一项定性研究,使用半结构化访谈、焦点小组、利益相关者研讨会和会议。在澳大利亚的 21 个地点收集数据。与从事原住民健康和眼保健工作的 289 人进行了半结构化访谈;与 81 名社区成员进行了焦点小组讨论;与 86 名利益相关者进行了利益相关者研讨会;与 75 人分别举行了会议。共有 531 人参加了磋商。通过主题分析确定了障碍和问题,并通过迭代协商制定了政策解决方案。
原住民眼保健服务协调不善,效率低下且成本高昂,导致患者、社区和医疗保健提供者的结果较差。在服务协调良好且患者在护理途径上得到病例管理的情况下,服务更加有效。建立明确的护理途径、发展本地和区域伙伴关系以管理服务和服务提供者以及应用具有明确角色和责任的足够劳动力,有可能在眼保健方面取得重要进展。
协调是缩小原住民眼保健差距的关键。通过病例管理对患者路径进行适当的协调护理和支持将节省因未接受治疗而流失的患者的费用,并且一个运作良好的系统将鼓励更多的人接受治疗。