Leavy Paul, Symmons Sophie Mulcahy, Mockler David, Fleming Pádraic, Daly Blánaid, Ford John, Burke Sara
Centre for Health Policy and Management, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland.
UCD Centre for Interdisciplinary Research Education and Innovation in Health Systems (UCD IRIS Centre), School of Nursing Midwifery and Health Systems, University College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland.
Health Policy. 2025 Mar;153:105248. doi: 10.1016/j.healthpol.2025.105248. Epub 2025 Jan 13.
To identify health system contexts and mechanisms influencing general dental practitioners' (GDPs) participation in state funded, contracted primary oral healthcare.
Peer-reviewed articles and other sources were identified via EMBASE, Medline (OVID), Web of Science and Google Scholar databases, grey literature search, citation tracking and expert recommendations. Studies meeting the inclusion criteria were assessed for rigour, relevance and richness, and coded to identify data relating to contexts, mechanisms and outcomes. Inductive and deductive coding was used to generate context-mechanism-outcome configurations (CMOCs) and develop the final programme theory.
Database searching identified 1,844 articles of which 29 were included. A further 33 sources were identified through adjunctive searches. Analysis identified key systems contexts influencing GDP participation. These include system emphasis on treatment over prevention, low priority for oral healthcare, funding constraints, and change implementation with minimal clinician consensus. At operational level, contracts can restrict GDP decision-making and ability to deliver high quality and holistic patient care. Key underlying mechanisms were feelings of ceded clinical and entrepreneurial control, stress and demoralisation, mistrust of the system and feeling undervalued.
The factors influencing GDP participation in state-funded, contracted dental care over private dental care are complex. The findings presented in this review have the potential to act as a good place to start leveraging health system change including better GDP engagement and increase participation in publicly funded systems.
确定影响普通牙科医生(GDPs)参与国家资助的签约初级口腔保健的卫生系统背景和机制。
通过EMBASE、Medline(OVID)、科学网和谷歌学术数据库、灰色文献搜索、引文跟踪和专家推荐来识别同行评审文章和其他来源。对符合纳入标准的研究进行严谨性、相关性和丰富性评估,并进行编码以识别与背景、机制和结果相关的数据。采用归纳和演绎编码来生成背景-机制-结果配置(CMOCs)并制定最终的项目理论。
数据库搜索识别出1844篇文章,其中29篇被纳入。通过辅助搜索又识别出33个来源。分析确定了影响GDP参与的关键系统背景。这些包括系统对治疗而非预防的重视、口腔保健的低优先级、资金限制以及在临床医生共识极少的情况下实施变革。在操作层面,合同可能会限制GDP的决策以及提供高质量和全面患者护理的能力。关键的潜在机制包括临床和创业控制权的让渡感(译者注:此处ceded clinical and entrepreneurial control直译为“让渡临床和创业控制权”,可能是指感觉在医疗过程中自己在临床决策和业务发展等方面的控制权被削弱 )、压力和士气低落、对系统的不信任以及感觉被低估。
影响GDP参与国家资助的签约牙科护理而非私人牙科护理的因素很复杂。本综述中的研究结果有可能成为推动卫生系统变革的良好起点,包括更好地让GDP参与并增加对公共资助系统的参与度。