| Literature DB >> 32661039 |
Braden O'Neill1, Robert Ferrer2, Patricia O'Brien2, Graham Watt2, Laura Gottlieb2, Andrew Pinto2, Sara Willems2, Jody Currie2, Dawnmarie Harriott2, Jonathan Leitch2, Alexander Zsager2, Michael Kidd2, Tara Kiran2.
Abstract
Health equity allows people to reach their full health potential and receive high-quality care that is appropriate for them and their needs, no matter where they live, what they have, or who they are. It is a core element of quality in health care. Around the world, there are many efforts to improve equity through primary care. In order to advance these efforts, it is important to share successes and challenges. Building on our work with international stakeholders to identify key primary care research priorities, we organized the Toronto International Conference on Quality in Primary Care that was held on November 16, 2019. Participants from 8 countries took part. Key recommendations included the establishment of continuous relationships between providers and patients over time, relationships between providers in the health and social sectors, and resources supported proportionally to patient need. Solutions must be generated using team-based approaches that explicitly include people with who have experienced discrimination. Progress will require confronting structural determinants including racism, capitalism, and colonialism. Conference participants suggested practical solutions, such as developing a public transportation program for rural residents to improve community building and the ability to attend medical appointments, and identifying patients who have recently missed clinic visits that may benefit from additional care. These approaches will need to be evaluated through high-quality research and quality improvement, with a knowledge translation that facilitates sustainability and expansion across settings.Entities:
Keywords: health equity; primary health care; quality improvement; quality of health care; social determinants of health
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32661039 PMCID: PMC7358019 DOI: 10.1370/afm.2560
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Fam Med ISSN: 1544-1709 Impact factor: 5.166