| Literature DB >> 23919296 |
Joanne Reeve1, Tom Blakeman, George K Freeman, Larry A Green, Paul A James, Peter Lucassen, Carmel M Martin, Joachim P Sturmberg, Chris van Weel.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A growing proportion of people are living with long term conditions. The majority have more than one. Dealing with multi-morbidity is a complex problem for health systems: for those designing and implementing healthcare as well as for those providing the evidence informing practice. Yet the concept of multi-morbidity (the presence of >2 diseases) is a product of the design of health care systems which define health care need on the basis of disease status. So does the solution lie in an alternative model of healthcare? DISCUSSION: Strengthening generalist practice has been proposed as part of the solution to tackling multi-morbidity. Generalism is a professional philosophy of practice, deeply known to many practitioners, and described as expertise in whole person medicine. But generalism lacks the evidence base needed by policy makers and planners to support service redesign. The challenge is to fill this practice-research gap in order to critically explore if and when generalist care offers a robust alternative to management of this complex problem. We need practice-based evidence to fill this gap. By recognising generalist practice as a 'complex intervention' (intervening in a complex system), we outline an approach to evaluate impact using action-research principles. We highlight the implications for those who both commission and undertake research in order to tackle this problem.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23919296 PMCID: PMC3750615 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2296-14-112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Figure 1Defining expert generalist practice [[26],[27]].
Assessing capacity for expert generalist practice in the management of multi-morbidity
| Sense making | Understand illness as a personal challenge [ | Value personalised decision making and the effort of interpretive practice | Policy and strategy recognise | Training of next generation |
| Organisational memory | ||||
| Engagement | Able and willing to access expert generalist care | Able and willing to make space within working practice to engage in EGP | Policy and organisational systems designed to recognise multi-morbidity as needing personalised care | Continuity of service and care |
| Action | Patients with the energy and resource to be active partners | Practitioners have skills and resources for interpretive practice (access to range of knowledge including through communication skills, time and support for interpretation and critical review) | System design creates time, space and resource for actions | Stability of service |
| Monitoring | Patient feedback recognises impact of care on health as a resource for living | Personal and collective professional reflection supports the critical analysis of judgements made in personalised decision making | Quality markers and performance management recognise EGP | Feedback integrated into ongoing service development – action learning principles |
* robust enough to last within a changing healthcare context.
Figure 2The generalism in action framework.