Questions? Call 888-624-8373

PAPERBACK
list:$62.00
Web:$55.80
add to cart

PDF BOOK
your price: $47.50
add to cart

Rights & Permissions

topleft topright

Community Oriented Primary Care: New Directions for Health Services Delivery (1983)
Institute of Medicine (IOM)

Page
289
bottomleft bottomright
Page
289
Front Matter (R1-R14)
Overview and Summary (1-5)
Community Oriented Primary Care: Lessons Learned in Three Decades (6-18)
Part I: Theoretical Issues (19-20)
Community Oriented Primary Care: Meaning and Scope (21-59)
The Meaning of Community Oriented Primary Care in the American Context (60-103)
Community Oriented Primary Care: An International Perspective (104-118)
Opportunities and Constraints for Community Oriented Primary Care (119-137)
Health Worker Roles in Community Oriented Primary Care (138-166)
Medical Education and Training for Community Oriented Primary Care (167-197)
Thoughts on Community Oriented Primary Care (198-206)
Part II: Practical Applications (207-208)
Promoting COPC Through a Rural Health Care Network: Marshfield Clinic (209-213)
COPC in the Texas Valley (214-216)
Elements of COPC in the UMWA Health and Retirement Funds Program (217-221)
COPC and a State Health Department: West Virginia's Experience (222-224)
Columbia University-Harlem Hospital Primary Care Network (225-226)
COPC in a Hospital-Affiliated Health Center (227-229)
Denver Health and Hospitals Experience (230-233)
Partnership for Health: The Family Nurse Practitioner/Family Physician Team (234-238)
The Patient Advisory Council Concept (239-242)
The Application of COPC in a Welsh Mining Village (243-249)
Training for COPC in the Netherlands and Around the World (250-257)
Can Area Health Education Centers Promote COPC? The Colorado Experience (258-263)
Departments of Family Practice as Vehicles for Promoting COPC (264-268)
New Mexico's Primary Care Curriculum (269-271)
The Beersheva Experience in COPC (272-275)
The Upper Peninsula Medical Education Program (276-280)
Part III: Workshop Discussion Summaries (281-282)
Workshop A (283-284)
Workshop B (285-286)
Workshop C (287-288)
Workshop D (289-290)
Workshop E (291-292)
Participants (293-299)

Below are the first 10 and last 10 pages of uncorrected machine-read text (when available) of this chapter, followed by the top 30 algorithmically extracted key phrases from the chapter as a whole.
Intended to provide our own search engines and external engines with highly rich, chapter-representative searchable text on the opening pages of each chapter. Because it is UNCORRECTED material, please consider the following text as a useful but insufficient proxy for the authoritative book pages.

Do not use for reproduction, copying, pasting, or reading; exclusively for search engines.

OCR for page 289
Workshop D Wyeth Schorr Our workshop shared with the others a great concern that the energy from this excellent and very productive meeting not be dissipated, but be har- nessed in the service of nurturing existing COPCs and encouraging their spread. It was felt that some mechanism the precise attributes of which were not defined very clearly should be supported or created or exploited or captured to perform a variety of functions. First, such a mechanism should define systematically the objectives of COPC against which performance of COPCs generally and COPCs indi- vidually can be measured, particularly in relation to outcomes and effec- tiveness. Secondly, this mechanism should facilitate communication and mutual assistance among existing COPCs, among nascent ones, between existing ones and nascent ones, between potential COPC providers who are now in training, and also among communities that might feel a need for a COPC model if they knew enough about the concept tO want to utilize the ap- proach. Thirdly, this mechanism should help institutions training health profes- sionals to develop curricula that are relevant to COPC or its components, especially by: . providing health professions with greater skills in epidemiology and in management; . encouraging joint training of a variety of health professionals; and . helping health training institutions provide a more compelling and 289

OCR for page 290
290 PART III: WORKSHOP DISCUSSION SUMMARIES attractive role model of valued primary care providers, operating at a high level of skill, competence, and dedication. This suggestion was made recognizing that changing medical education is not a sufficient, although probably a necessary, condition for achieving the kind of change that is needed. Fourthly, the group agreed that this new and continuing mechanism might also explore the possibility of making inroads on some of the broader problems affecting the future of COPC, including the problem of modifying financial arrangements, to assure payment for a full range of health services and health professionals, and the financing of health profession education in ways that make primary care a more attractive option. Lastly, this mechanism should provide technical assistance to operating COPCs in several very specific ways: 1. Provide expertise to help COPCs collect epidemiologic data about the occurrence, distribution, and determinants of health and disease in the community and to assess the efficacy of the interventions used. 2. Actually provide some of the epidemiologic information that may have been collected by another agency or group. (It was felt that some further sorting Out was needed about the kinds of epidemiologic investi- gation that could be most appropriately done directly at the COPC level and what could come from a regional or perhaps even a national level.) 3. Help COPCs to deal with the discrepancy between how the com- munity and providers perceive both needs and demands. 4. Help COPCs forge better links with other agencies and services. 5. Create a support system that will do more than the individual COPC can do so that the health providers working in COPC settings remain and work productively and happily over time. Such a support system can provide stimulus, sanction, and a sense of being part of an effort that has great significance in attempts to improve the health of the families and com- munltles t ney serve.

Representative terms from entire chapter:

help copcs