| Literature DB >> 28762840 |
Christos Lionis1, Patrik Midlöv2.
Abstract
Prevention is viewed as a key issue for general practice, yet there is a lack of evidence regarding general practitioners' interventions in both middle-aged and elderly people. This is despite the fact that recommendations and key indicators for monitoring the use of clinical preventive strategies aimed at these groups are available and that both the World Health Organization and European Commission endorse the importance of interventions for healthy and active ageing. This paper draws on two keynote presentations given at the 2015 autumn meeting of the European General Practice Research Network (EGPRN) in Edirne, Turkey (17-20 October 2015). According to the EU2020 strategy, general practitioners should design and implement prevention services and programmes to promote healthy and active ageing. Their primary focus should be on interventions on multimorbid patients, either by improving prescribing and adherence to medical plans or by targeting to fall and frailty prevention and vaccination uptake.Entities:
Keywords: Prevention; elderly; health and active ageing; research in general practice
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28762840 PMCID: PMC5806089 DOI: 10.1080/13814788.2017.1350646
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Gen Pract ISSN: 1381-4788 Impact factor: 1.904
| EUROPREV strongly endorses the following statements |
| Determinants | Example |
| Economic determinants | Income, work and social protection |
| Health and social service systems | Access to quality health and social services |
| Physical environment | Housing, neighbourhood and surroundings, transportation |
| Social environment | Social support and degree of social interaction |
| Cultural and personal determinants | Cultural values, norms and traditions, genetic influence |
| Behavioural determinants | Life-style behaviour, well-balanced diet, physical activity, smoking cessation, moderate alcohol consumption, appropriate use of medications |
| • Better prescription and adherence to medical plans for older patients• Personalized health management, starting with a Falls Prevention Initiative• Prevention and early diagnosis of frailty and functional decline, both physical and cognitive, in older people• Replicating and tutoring integrated care for chronic diseases, including remote monitoring at regional level• Development of interoperable independent living solutions, including guidelines for business models• Social Innovation for age-friendly buildings, cities and environment |