4.6 Article

Perceived facilitators and barriers to chronic disease management in primary care networks of Singapore: a qualitative study

期刊

BMJ OPEN
卷 11, 期 5, 页码 -

出版社

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-046010

关键词

primary care; health policy; change management; clinical governance; organisation of health services; qualitative research

资金

  1. National Medical Research Council (NMRC)
  2. Ministry of Health (MOH), Singapore
  3. Centre Grant Programme Singapore Population Health Improvement Center [NMRC/CG/C026/2017_NUHS]
  4. Health Service Research Grant (HSRG) [NMRC/HSRG/0086/2018]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

PCNs empower GPs to manage patients with chronic conditions more effectively through provision of ancillary services, systematic monitoring, and funding support. However, barriers such as high administrative load in maintaining the chronic disease registry and financial obstacles faced by patients seeking services from private GPs need to be addressed for the sustainability of PCNs.
Objective The increasing chronic disease burden has placed tremendous strain on tertiary healthcare resources in most countries, necessitating a shift in chronic disease management from tertiary to primary care providers. The Primary Care Network (PCN) policy was promulgated as a model of care to organise private general practitioners (GPs) into groups to provide GPs with resources to anchor patients with chronic conditions with them in the community. As PCN is still in its embryonic stages, there is a void in research regarding its ability to empower GPs to manage patients with chronic conditions effectively. This qualitative study aims to explore the facilitators and barriers for the management of patients with chronic conditions by GPs enrolled in PCN. Design We conducted 30 semistructured interviews with GPs enrolled in a PCN followed by a thematic analysis of audio transcripts until data saturation was achieved. Setting Singapore. Results Our results suggest that PCNs facilitated GPs to more effectively manage patients through (1) provision of ancillary services such as diabetic foot screening, diabetic retinal photography and nurse counselling to permit a 'one-stop-shop', (2) systematic monitoring of process and clinical outcome indicators through a chronic disease registry (CDR) to promote accountability for patients' health outcomes and (3) funding streams for PCNs to hire additional manpower to oversee operations and to reimburse GPs for extended consultations. Barriers include high administrative load in maintaining the CDR due to the lack of a smart electronic clinic management system and financial gradient faced by patients seeking services from private GPs which incur higher out-of-pocket expenses than public primary healthcare institutions. Conclusion PCNs demonstrate great promise in empowering enrolled GPs to manage patients with chronic conditions. However, barriers will need to be addressed to ensure the viability of PCNs in managing more patients in the face of an ageing population.

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