Systematic Practice-based Asthma Care In The Australian Setting
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$563,625.00
Summary
Asthma is an illness which increasingly is affecting the health and quality of life of millions of Australians. Much effort has been focused in recent years on ways of improving the management of those people who suffer from moderate and severe asthma. A recent government initiative has been to promote the use of the 3+ Visit Plan, which encourages a more proactive, systematic approach to assessing and treating asthma in general practice. There is currently no evidence about exactly how practice ....Asthma is an illness which increasingly is affecting the health and quality of life of millions of Australians. Much effort has been focused in recent years on ways of improving the management of those people who suffer from moderate and severe asthma. A recent government initiative has been to promote the use of the 3+ Visit Plan, which encourages a more proactive, systematic approach to assessing and treating asthma in general practice. There is currently no evidence about exactly how practices can best be organized to provide this systematic care, in a way which improves the process of care and the health outcomes for patients. This study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of changing aspects of practice organization and structure, such as setting up registers of asthma patients, providing recalls or reminders to patients to come in for regular review, having the GPs provide education and self-management skills to patients, focusing on the contributions which practice staff can make to the process, and initiating quality assurance measures such as audit and feedback to the GPs about their quality of care. We anticipate that these changes will provide positive benefits for the patients, but will also investigate what it costs the practices, patients and government to bring these changes about, within the perspective of efficiency and cost-effectiveness. The evidence generated by this study will provide an excellent base for providing advice to policy makers, as well as contributing to the development of best-practice models of care for asthma patients in general practice.Read moreRead less
Improving Asthma Control: General Practice Strategies To Optimise Medication Adherence
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$460,820.00
Summary
Asthma is a major health problem for Australia. Many patients have frequent symptoms and need urgent health care because they do not use a preventer inhaler regularly. This may be intentional e.g. fear of side-effects, and-or unintentional e.g. forgetting. This real-life study will test two simple strategies for GPs to improve their patients' use of preventer medications, to improve asthma control. Innovative technology will allow GPs to tailor the approach to each patient during a normal visit.