Collaborative practice Flashcards
Components of a healthcare system
- Structure: How the system is organised
- Functions: What functions does the system want to achieve?
- Target population: Who does the system provide care for?
- Personnel (Workforce): Who works in the system
- Funding: How is the system funded
- Reimbursement: How are health professionals paid
What is the NHS constitution?
- The NHS provides a COMPREHENSIVE SERVICE, AVAILABLE to ALL
- Access to NHS services is based on CLINICAL NEED, not an individual’s ability to pay
- The NHS aspires to the highest standards of EXCELLENCE AND PROFESSIONALISM
- The PATIENT WILL BE AT THE HEART of everything the NHS does
- The NHS works ACROSS ORGANISATIONAL BOUNDARIES
- The NHS is committed to providing BEST VALUE FOR TAXPAYERS’ MONEY
- The NHS is ACCOUNTABLE TO THE PUBLIC, COMMUNITIES AND PATIENTS that it serves
Structure of a health care system?
- Primary care
- Local health care that people receive from GPs, dentists, community pharmacists and optometrists
- Secondary care
- Consultant-led services usually delivered in hospitals, where patients have been referred by a primary care professionals (exception being emergency care)
- Tertiary care
- Consultant-led health care, usually for inpatients referred by primary or secondary health professionals, in a facility that has advanced staff and facilities
Factors that influence healthcare systems
Political
Economic
Social
Technological
Definition of collaborative practice?
Dynamic process when “multiple health workers from different professional backgrounds work together with patients, families, carers and communities to deliver the highest quality care”
Definition of inter-professional practice (IPE)?
Provides an ability to share knowledge and skills among professions and is conducive to better understanding, shared values and respect for the roles of other health professionals.
Importance of collaborative working?
- Globally and nationally have inequalities in general and oral health
- Burden of chronic diseases
- Burden of infectious diseases
- Environmental and behavioural risks against a rapid demographic and epidemiological transitions
- Health care systems are struggling to keep populations healthy as they become more complex and costly
- Huge demand on health workers to promote health
Why use collaborative working for health?
- Common risk factor approach- common health risks posed to oral health and systemic health
- e.g. smoking is associated with periodontal diseases, cardiovascular diseases, respiratory diseases and cancers
- Impact of oral health on health related quality of life and wider impacts
- Poor oral health has been shown to result in decreased academic performance and can adversely affect behavioural and social development (Jackson et al al. 2011)
Dental team’s roles in collaborative practice
- Dentists are the front-line medical professionals in the prevention, early detection and treatment of oral and systemic diseases. They should therefore play a leadership role to improve oral health and general health
- CP increases efficiency and quality in relation to service delivery
- CP improves access and quality
- CP reduces costs by avoiding duplication of efforts
- CP improves mutual trust and accountability among providers and results in better coordinated care