Allied health are key to improving health for people with chronic disease: but where are the outcomes and where is the strategy?
Author(s) -
Sarah Dennis,
Lauren Ball,
Mark Harris,
Kathryn M. Refshauge
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
australian journal of primary health
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.524
H-Index - 30
eISSN - 1836-7399
pISSN - 1448-7527
DOI - 10.1071/py21076
Subject(s) - health care , medicine , population health , health economics , disease , psychological intervention , health policy , community health , nursing , social determinants of health , public health , chronic disease , government (linguistics) , family medicine , economic growth , pathology , linguistics , philosophy , economics
The global burden of chronic disease has forced health systems to focus on improved care. This has led to improved health outcomes for some populations, but not for all people or for all conditions. The rising prevalence of chronic disease has also significantly increased demands on healthcare systems, with unsustainable costs to funders. To improve health and social outcomes for all people with chronic disease, it is critical to embrace allied health professionals as key members of primary healthcare teams. The recognised efficacy and cost-effectiveness of many allied health interventions suggest that implementation into usual care would result in enhanced outcomes for people accessing healthcare, their families and communities, and for health systems. Our aim is to highlight the current unacceptable lack of allied health integration into primary healthcare teams, and illustrate the potential value of improved and equitable access to allied health professionals for managing chronic conditions and multimorbidity.
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