Facilitating Groups in Primary Care

Facilitating Groups in Primary Care
Author: Marion Duffy
Publisher: CRC Press
Total Pages: 92
Release: 2020-01-31
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 1315348284

Medicine is one of the oldest professions; in common with law, it tends to complicate or mystify its writings by persistent use of obscure jargon. However, an increasing number of lay workers, including administrators, practice managers, medical secretaries, lawyers, social workers and care assistants, are required to be able to interpret medical records, reports and prescriptions. This book unlocks the mystery of medicine for all those whose work involves the use of medical terms, whether in hospital or general practice, or as health authority employees. It will meet the needs of most as a quick, accurate reference source for fundamental anatomical, physiological, clinical and pharmacological terms.

Facilitating Organisational Change in Primary Care

Facilitating Organisational Change in Primary Care
Author: Marion Duffy
Publisher: Radcliffe Publishing
Total Pages: 52
Release: 2000
Genre: Group facilitation
ISBN: 9781857754957

Clinicians and managers are increasingly required to participate in or manage new initiatives which depend heavily on co-operation, collaboration and a multidisciplinary approach, where effective interpersonal and group skills are of vital importance. This practical guide encourages the reader to determine how their organisations work and the impact they have on their members. It draws on the experiences of primary care research and development projects and contains numerous case studies, tips and techniques to manage change. It is an essential guide for healthcare professionals in primary care, and will equip those working in practice, and facilitators working with practices, with a clear understanding of how to achieve successful acceptance and management of change.

Implementing Evidence-Based Practice in Healthcare

Implementing Evidence-Based Practice in Healthcare
Author: Gill Harvey
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 292
Release: 2015-03-24
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 1136768157

The successful implementation of evidence into practice is dependent on aligning the available evidence to the particular context through the active ingredient of facilitation. Designed to support the widely recognised PARIHS framework, which works as a guide to plan, action and evaluate the implementation of evidence into practice, this book provides a very practical ‘how-to’ guide for facilitating the whole process. This text discusses: undertaking an initial diagnosis of the context and reaching a consensus on the evidence to be implemented; how to link the research evidence with clinical and patients’ experience and local information in the form of audit data or patient and staff feedback; the range of diagnostic, consensus building and stakeholder consultation methods that can be helpful; a description of facilitator roles and facilitation methods, tools and techniques; some of theories that underpin the PARIHS framework and how these have been integrated to inform a revised version of PARIHS Including internationally-sourced case study examples to illustrate how the facilitation role and facilitation skills have been applied in a range of different health care settings, this is the ideal text for those interested in leading or facilitating evidence based implementation projects, from the planning stage through to evaluation.

Prevention Practice in Primary Care

Prevention Practice in Primary Care
Author: Sherri Sheinfeld Gorin
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 338
Release: 2014-03-03
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 0199706638

Amid the ongoing changes in how health care is administered and financed, prevention-oriented care is a critical and cost-effective method for improving population health through primary care. As the key figure in promoting patients' health and prevention of disease, the primary care provider can play a major role in patient engagement, self-management, and behavior change. Prevention Practice in Primary Care systematically explores state-of-the-art practical approaches to effective prevention in primary care. Guided by theory and evidence, the book reviews approaches to risk factor identification and modification for the major causes of mortality in adulthood, including cancer, stroke, and cardiovascular disease. Topical coverage in this book includes: · the practical applications of genomics and proteomics to personalizing prevention · transformative approaches to practice change, including the patient-centered medical home, academic detailing, and practice facilitation · Engaging self-management and behavior change using counseling tools (goal setting, assessing the stage of change, motivational interviewing, and the five A's) Prevention Practice in Primary Care is a vital, practical guidebook for the implementation of evidence-based prevention to improve patient health. Brief, simple summaries and innovative content make it book a valuable reference for busy practitioners and students alike.

Groups

Groups
Author: Glyn Elwyn
Publisher: Radcliffe Publishing
Total Pages: 342
Release: 2001
Genre: Communication in small groups
ISBN: 9781857754001

This is a practical guide to when and how to use small group work in a range of healthcare settings. It provides a practical summary incorporating healthcare, educational, social and management perspectives.

Integrating Behavioral Health and Primary Care

Integrating Behavioral Health and Primary Care
Author: Dr. Robert Feinstein
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 593
Release: 2017-04-13
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 0190276916

Integrated care incorporates behavioral and physical health services into primary care and specialty medical environments. Integrated care models are patient-centered; delivered by teams of medical professionals, utilize care coordination, and a population-based approach. This book is practical, office-based, and comfortably accessible to students, residents, faculty, and all mental health professionals, primary care and medical specialists. We examine and recommend applying collaborative care and other existing models of integrated care based on existing literature. When there is no literature supporting a specific approach, our experts offer their ideas and take an aspirational approach about how to manage and treat specific behavioral disorder or problems We assume the use of integrated team staffing including a primary care or specialist provider(s), front desk staff, medical assistant(s), nurse(s), nurse practitioners, behavioral health specialist(s), health coaches, consulting psychiatrist, and care coordinator(s)/manager(s).

Implementing Evidence-Based Practice in Healthcare

Implementing Evidence-Based Practice in Healthcare
Author: Gill Harvey
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 240
Release: 2015-03-24
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 1136768084

The successful implementation of evidence into practice is dependent on aligning the available evidence to the particular context through the active ingredient of facilitation. Designed to support the widely recognised PARIHS framework, which works as a guide to plan, action and evaluate the implementation of evidence into practice, this book provides a very practical ‘how-to’ guide for facilitating the whole process. This text discusses: undertaking an initial diagnosis of the context and reaching a consensus on the evidence to be implemented; how to link the research evidence with clinical and patients’ experience and local information in the form of audit data or patient and staff feedback; the range of diagnostic, consensus building and stakeholder consultation methods that can be helpful; a description of facilitator roles and facilitation methods, tools and techniques; some of theories that underpin the PARIHS framework and how these have been integrated to inform a revised version of PARIHS Including internationally-sourced case study examples to illustrate how the facilitation role and facilitation skills have been applied in a range of different health care settings, this is the ideal text for those interested in leading or facilitating evidence based implementation projects, from the planning stage through to evaluation.

How to be a Good Enough GP

How to be a Good Enough GP
Author: Gerhard Wilke
Publisher: Radcliffe Publishing
Total Pages: 228
Release: 2001
Genre: Family medicine
ISBN: 9781857753585

The upheavals of the NHS reforms have caused a great deal of stress and uncertainty in primary care, and professional development and support for general practitioners needs to take account of this. This book offers a group supervision model which can be used to develop the core competencies needed for GPs to make the new primary care organisations work. The book analyses how primary care professionals have dealt with the various reforms of the past decade, and picks apart the paralysing culture of politeness, conflict avoidance and rivalry for power, to reveal how at the core of reform is the struggle for each GP to construct a new professional identity which integrates medicine, management and politics. It proposes ways GPs can benefit from these experiences to become equipped with the necessary competencies to be active members or dynamic leaders in the new primary care organisations. The doctor-patient relationship is no longer one-to-one, but located within a group matrix, in the same way that a GP is now required to work within a group framework. This book enables GPs to develop the essential group skills they now need, and on which the success of the healthcare reforms ultimately depends.