初级保健和公众健康:来自服务发展倡议的证据

R. Bryar
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The papers included explore two main themes relevant to development: how PHC can best respond to the need to promote health through a recognition of the wider determinants of health and secondly how primary care is best organised to deliver a service which is acceptable and accessible to the population. The papers included in this issue are drawn from studies in Canada, the USA, Nigeria and the UK reflecting the international interest in questions of application and testing of evidence in practice. The papers by van Weel et al. (2017) and DeSantis et al. (2017) argue for the use of wider frameworks to be used in implementation and evaluation of PHC interventions. van Weel et al. (2017) suggest a focus on the context within which PHC is delivered and identify four dimensions which they advocate should be reported on in studies of PHC: the health system; the social welfare system; the population and society characteristics; and details of the objectives of an intervention. These authors note that most care is delivered in the community and the dimensions identified reflect the reality of the impact of multiple factors, apart from direct care, on people’s health. Awareness of these factors suggests the importance of the relationship between PHC, with its access to individuals, and public health, with its focus on the wider determinants (Laverack, 2015). DeSantis et al. (2017) explore a framework drawn from the behavioural sciences in a study testing the application of the Outcomes Rating Scale to adults attending primary care services. The scale asks people to rate themselves in terms of their individual personal wellbeing, their family and close relationships, their social and wider interpersonal relationships, and their overall sense of wellbeing. In this exploratory study, comparing findings with other scales used in primary care to measure depression, they argue that use of this framework has the potential to identify a larger group of people with situational and relationship distress than scales more specifically focussed on disease symptoms. The growing evidence concerning the impact of personal relationships on health supports the use of such a scale in PHC settings (Balfour et al., 2012; Meier, ND). Underlying this concern with wider factors impacting on health is the world-wide growth in people’s experience of living with long-term conditions and multimorbidity. The Cochrane review (Trivedi, 2017) in this issue considers the evidence of the effectiveness of health service and patient orientated interventions on outcomes for people with multimorbidity. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

自2000年创刊以来,初级卫生保健(PHC)的发展一直是本刊关注的中心问题:“在初级卫生保健实践中实施研究和评估也是本刊的一个重要领域,编辑们欢迎直接解决实施挑战和成功的研究。”在所有论文中,作者都应该展示他们的研究或开发研究如何在本国和国际范围内与初级保健相关”(https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/primaryhealth-care-research-and-development)。为了认识到这一问题,本期杂志的论文重点关注发展,在这篇社论中,将概述这些论文对初级卫生保健发展的贡献。这些文件包括探讨与发展有关的两个主要主题:初级保健如何通过认识到更广泛的健康决定因素来最好地响应促进健康的需要;第二,初级保健如何最好地组织起来,以提供一种人们可接受和可获得的服务。本期收录的论文来自加拿大、美国、尼日利亚和英国的研究,反映了国际上对实践中证据的应用和检验问题的兴趣。van Weel等人(2017)和DeSantis等人(2017)的论文主张在实施和评估初级保健干预措施时使用更广泛的框架。van Weel等人(2017)建议关注初级保健提供的背景,并确定他们主张在初级保健研究中应报告的四个维度:卫生系统;社会福利制度;人口与社会特征;以及干预目标的细节。这些作者指出,大多数护理是在社区提供的,所确定的方面反映了除直接护理外,多种因素对人们健康的影响的现实。对这些因素的认识表明,初级保健与个人接触和公共卫生之间关系的重要性,其重点是更广泛的决定因素(Laverack, 2015)。DeSantis等人(2017)在一项研究中探索了从行为科学中得出的框架,该研究测试了结果评定量表对参加初级保健服务的成年人的应用。该量表要求人们从个人幸福感、家庭和亲密关系、社会和更广泛的人际关系以及整体幸福感等方面对自己进行评分。在这项探索性研究中,他们将研究结果与初级保健中用于测量抑郁症的其他量表进行了比较,他们认为,与更具体地关注疾病症状的量表相比,使用该框架有可能识别出更多的情境和关系困扰人群。越来越多的证据表明,个人关系对健康的影响支持在初级保健环境中使用这种量表(Balfour等人,2012;迈耶,ND)。这种对影响健康的更广泛因素的关注的基础是,世界范围内患有长期疾病和多重疾病的人的生活经历在增加。本期的Cochrane综述(Trivedi, 2017)考虑了卫生服务和以患者为导向的干预措施对多病患者结局的有效性证据。尽管有证据表明针对合并症和抑郁症的干预措施是有益的,但其他的发现是喜忧参半的,结论是需要针对各种情况的问题的干预措施,以及对干预措施有效性的更好的测量和研究。两篇论文讨论了干预和测量问题,提出了不同的非医疗干预类型的案例,以解决影响健康的一些背景、行为和关系挑战。Gandy等人(2017)报告了英国西兰开夏郡多方面二级预防计划的详细多方法评估。这一为期三年的方案包括一系列干预措施,包括教育课程、排舞、午餐俱乐部等活动、语言初级卫生保健研究与开发2017年;18: 105-108 EDITORIAL doi:10.1017/S1463423617000020
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Primary care and the public’s health: evidence from service development initiatives
The development of primary health care (PHC) has been a central concern of this Journal since it was launched in 2000: ‘Implementation of research and evaluation into PHC practice is also an area of significance to the journal and studies that directly address the challenges and successes of implementation arewelcomed by the editors. In all papers, authors should demonstrate how their research or development study relates to primary care both in the context of their own country and internationally’ (https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/primaryhealth-care-research-and-development). In recognition of this concern, the papers in this issue of the journal focus on development and, in this editorial, an overview of the contribution of these papers to the development of PHC will be discussed. The papers included explore two main themes relevant to development: how PHC can best respond to the need to promote health through a recognition of the wider determinants of health and secondly how primary care is best organised to deliver a service which is acceptable and accessible to the population. The papers included in this issue are drawn from studies in Canada, the USA, Nigeria and the UK reflecting the international interest in questions of application and testing of evidence in practice. The papers by van Weel et al. (2017) and DeSantis et al. (2017) argue for the use of wider frameworks to be used in implementation and evaluation of PHC interventions. van Weel et al. (2017) suggest a focus on the context within which PHC is delivered and identify four dimensions which they advocate should be reported on in studies of PHC: the health system; the social welfare system; the population and society characteristics; and details of the objectives of an intervention. These authors note that most care is delivered in the community and the dimensions identified reflect the reality of the impact of multiple factors, apart from direct care, on people’s health. Awareness of these factors suggests the importance of the relationship between PHC, with its access to individuals, and public health, with its focus on the wider determinants (Laverack, 2015). DeSantis et al. (2017) explore a framework drawn from the behavioural sciences in a study testing the application of the Outcomes Rating Scale to adults attending primary care services. The scale asks people to rate themselves in terms of their individual personal wellbeing, their family and close relationships, their social and wider interpersonal relationships, and their overall sense of wellbeing. In this exploratory study, comparing findings with other scales used in primary care to measure depression, they argue that use of this framework has the potential to identify a larger group of people with situational and relationship distress than scales more specifically focussed on disease symptoms. The growing evidence concerning the impact of personal relationships on health supports the use of such a scale in PHC settings (Balfour et al., 2012; Meier, ND). Underlying this concern with wider factors impacting on health is the world-wide growth in people’s experience of living with long-term conditions and multimorbidity. The Cochrane review (Trivedi, 2017) in this issue considers the evidence of the effectiveness of health service and patient orientated interventions on outcomes for people with multimorbidity. Although the evidence suggests benefit from interventions aimed at comorbidity and depression, other findings are mixed and it is concluded that interventions that target problems across conditions are needed, as well as better measurement and research into effectiveness of interventions. Two papers address the intervention and measurement issues, making the case for different, non-medical, types of interventions to address some of the context, behavioural and relationship challenges impacting on health. Gandy et al. (2017) report on a detailed multimethod evaluation of a multifaceted secondary prevention programme in West Lancashire, UK. This three-year programme consisted of a range of interventions including education sessions, activities such as line dancing, lunch clubs, language Primary Health Care Research & Development 2017; 18: 105–108 EDITORIAL doi:10.1017/S1463423617000020
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