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Australian Journal of Primary Health Australian Journal of Primary Health Society
The issues influencing community health services and primary health care
Table of Contents
Australian Journal of Primary Health

Australian Journal of Primary Health

Volume 30 Number 1 2024

Home visiting programs can improve outcomes for infants and families at risk of suboptimal health and developmental outcomes. However, there is limited evidence regarding the efficacy of current programs in use in Queensland. This study analyses Child Health Nurse perceptions of one such program, with findings confirming the need for active monitoring of program outcomes against their stated objectives.

The law supports good end-of-life clinical practice by facilitating health care that aligns with the values and goals of patients, including those residing in residential aged care facilities. GPs and nurses here reported broad-ranging legal concerns relevant to providing end-of-life care within aged care, including substitute decision makers/family members wanting to overrule Advance Care Directives, requests for futile or non-beneficial treatment and conflict about decision-making. Participants’ concerns can inform end-of-life legal training for aged care GPs and nurses.

PY23208Exploring the feasibility of a gambling harm screening model in general practice and community service settings in Fairfield: a pilot study

Andrew Reid 0000-0001-8173-2710, Nick McGhie 0000-0003-0827-9539, Thi Huyen Linh Nguyen 0000-0002-2815-0241, Uday Yadav 0000-0002-6626-1604, Patricia Cullen 0000-0003-4652-0936, Leon Booth 0000-0002-6326-1908 and Amy Bestman 0000-0003-1269-2123

Primary healthcare and community services are important settings for gambling harm screening, and more broadly can contribute to the prevention and treatment of gambling harm in communities. However, there has been limited research on how screening can be embedded into routine practice. This pilot research identifies the enablers and barriers to implementing a co-designed screening model in local primary care settings.

PY23017What do parents think about child’s routine height and weight measures? A qualitative study

Slavica Krstic, Sarah Dennis, Faye Southcombe and Elizabeth Denney-Wilson

Healthcare professionals (HCPs) are often reluctant to perform height and weight measurements or raise the issue of weight. In contrast, parents/carers often expect weight concerns to be addressed during episodes of care. Increasing HCP awareness of parents’/carers’ views and expectations in the prevention and management of obesity may lead to clinical practice improvements and provide a first step in addressing excess weight gain in children.

General practice nurses play a key role in delivering prevention. This paper describes the experience of implementing a nurse-led obesity intervention in Australian general practice through the lens of organisational readiness. Our results suggest that for nurses in general practice to fulfil their potential in supporting patients to reduce risk and adopt healthier life choices, more could be done to improve their workforce positioning and remuneration, which may, in turn, improve continuity of care, retention and individual motivation.

PY23127An integrative review of missed nursing care and the general practice nurse

Eileen Willis, Claire Verrall 0000-0001-5557-7067, Susan McInnes and Elyce Pate

Identifying missed nursing care is an important avenue to achieving improvements in patient care. Predominantly undertaken in the acute sector, there is a need to expand missed care research to the primary healthcare sector. We conducted an integrative review to determine missed care and the general practice nurse. Some commonalities between the primary health and acute sectors were identified such as issues with communication and resource availability. Recent calls for general practice nurses to work to the top of their scope involve a more nuanced understanding of the role, and what is being missed.

Physiotherapists working in primary care are becoming increasingly important members of interprofessional healthcare teams. This research outlines key strategies from the perspective of Queensland physiotherapy private practitioners, including reforming funding structures, leveraging digital communication and improving education and training initiatives, to promote effective interprofessional collaborative practice. The insights from this study underscore the broader complexities within Australia’s healthcare system and emphasise the need for strategic changes to achieve collaboration in ensuring optimal patient care.

PY23045Leading primary care under the weight of COVID-19: how leadership was enacted in six australian general practices during 2020

Kathleen Wisbey 0000-0003-2948-6721, Riki Lane 0000-0002-3334-5545, Jennifer Neil, Jenny Advocat 0000-0001-7965-2244, Karyn Alexander, Benjamin F. Crabtree 0000-0003-2292-6835, William L. Miller and Grant Russell 0000-0003-3773-2355

COVID-19 posed unique challenges to primary health care in Australia and globally. Leaders played a critical role in navigating the impacts of the pandemic, although minimal opportunities were created to foster emergent leaders. Hierarchical leadership styles allowed rapid responses, yet the impact of power imbalance affected the wider team morale. Our study demonstrates the importance of promoting interdisciplinary communication and the need for formal leadership training to be implemented in Australian general practices, to allow for better preparedness for future pandemics.

PY23135Healthy ageing in remote Cape York: a co-designed Integrated Allied Health Service Model

Alice Cairns 0000-0002-3943-1444, Danielle Rodda, Frances Wymarra and Katrina Bird 0000-0001-7017-6683

Remote communities require primary care services that are inclusive of allied health and can be responsive to individual and community needs. Services require a workforce and a service model that can be creative and flexible. The Service described, delivered both a novel service model that complemented the primary care services already being delivered, and focused on workforce and community capacity building.

Self-determination informed policies are key to improved outcomes for Aboriginal health. The paper presents work on an oral health policy, undertaken under Loddon Mallee Aboriginal Reference Group’s leadership on an Australian state (Victoria) regulation – The Drugs, Poisons and Controlled Substances Amendment (Registered Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Practitioners) Regulations 2022, as an exemplar of a self-determination informed change. The amendment translates to a culturally appropriate integrated oral health promotion model that addresses dental access barriers experienced by Aboriginal people.

This article belongs to the Collection Access to Primary Health Care.

PY23167A systematic search and narrative review of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women and men pelvic health care: demonstrated need for improvement

Emma M. Wise 0000-0003-1810-9525, Marilyn A. Morgan, Emily D. Biggs, Bronte H. Ellis, Marissa C. Joseph, Melanie L. Say, Lea T. Yanitsas, Jonathan C. Bullen 0000-0003-0437-2541, Brooke R. Conley 0000-0002-1677-4540, Ivan B. Lin 0000-0001-6901-2569, Leo Ng 0000-0002-9814-0495 and Darren J. Beales 0000-0002-7176-4644

Warning:This article contains terms, descriptions and opinions that may be culturally sensitive for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.

Pelvic health conditions are under-recognised and under-reported by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. Access to effective conservative (non-surgical) management options provided in a culturally safe manner appear to be lacking. We provide strategies to improve pelvic health care of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women and men by highlighting considerations that facilitate culturally safe pelvic health care at the systems, health service and clinician levels.

PY23195Access to general practice for preventive health care for people who experience severe mental illness in Sydney, Australia: a qualitative study

Catherine Spooner 0000-0002-6741-5644, Peri O’Shea 0009-0008-1393-2516, Karen R. Fisher 0000-0002-0828-6395, Ben Harris-Roxas 0000-0003-1716-2009, Jane Taggart 0000-0001-7283-6710, Patrick Bolton 0000-0002-3401-553X and Mark F. Harris 0000-0002-0705-8913

People with lived experience of severe mental illness (PWLE) experience poorer physical health and worse access to preventive care than the general population. This paper provides information from a lived experience perspective on how PWLE in Sydney, Australia have been able to access preventive care from a GP. These results highlight the importance of supporting PWLE to access effective preventive care across their journey and suggest specific areas for improvement in GP capabilities and care coordination/shared care.

This article belongs to the Collection Access to Primary Health Care.

Training GPs to deliver effective care for patients who use alcohol or other drugs is an important step in reducing the preventable burden of disease associated with substance use. The training program pilot tested here was found to be capable of increasing GPs’ confidence to address substance-related issues and increase their knowledge of current national guidance on low-risk alcohol consumption. A national scale-up of this program, coupled with increased incentives for GPs designed to encourage implementation and ongoing delivery, remains a necessary next-step.

PY23027Empowering our First Nations workforce: evaluation of a First Nations COVID-19 vaccination training program

Sean Cowley, Karina Baigrie, Katie Panaretto, Kelly Trudgen, Vanessa Clements, Oscar Whitehead and Rica Lacey

First Nations health professionals remain underrepresented in the workforce. This program aimed to maximise community COVID-19 vaccination coverage by placing First Nations staff central to their own community’s response to the pandemic. Evaluation shows these new skills were valuable in helping protect First Nations communities against the pandemic. Improving scope of practice for First Nations health staff can improve the delivery of primary health care to a community that continues to bear the inequity of poorer health outcomes.

Heart attack survivors expect that health professionals will communicate with them about sexual activity and intimacy, but previous research shows that this rarely occurs. This research qualitatively examines the perspectives of a range of health professionals working in cardiac care about barriers to discussing sexual activity and intimacy with patients. Discussions about sex and intimacy were perceived as nebulous and taboo topics; themes identified lead to recommendations for developing and implementing resources, training, and a clinical protocol to improve outcomes.

PY23136Quantitative analysis on dental utilisation in culturally and linguistically diverse mothers

Kanchan Marcus 0000-0002-2457-4004, Madhan Balasubramanian 0000-0003-2798-5850, Stephanie D. Short 0000-0002-9215-3308 and Woosung Sohn 0000-0002-7486-9652

Culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) mothers are influential in children’s behaviours, yet little is known about this population, whereas even less is known about CALD mothers experiencing distress and their oral health behaviours. This quantitative study addresses these gaps to investigate oral healthcare in CALD mothers. Findings affirm the need for improved integrated primary healthcare in general and oral health, and the expansion for services to outer regional and remote areas for health equity in CALD communities.

This article belongs to the Collection Access to Primary Health Care.

The rate of antidepressant use in Australia is among the highest in the world (one in seven adults) and increasing, while the rate in the Netherlands is about half that of Australia and remained steady over 2013–2021. The Netherlands achieved this through a multifaceted approach including improved access to non-pharmacological alternatives, initiatives targeting safer antidepressant prescribing and deprescribing, and tight regulation of pharmaceutical company influence on prescribers. Australia may learn from the Netherlands’ approach to redress increasing antidepressant use.

PY23123The evaluation of the Plan–Do–Study–Act cycles for a healthcare quality improvement intervention in primary care

Deborah Manandi 0000-0002-7532-0477, Qiang Tu, Nashid Hafiz, Rebecca Raeside, Julie Redfern and Karice Hyun

Plan–Do–Study–Act (PDSA) cycles are increasingly used as a framework for improving quality of health care, yet its utility in primary care practices have remained largely understudied. PDSA cycles reported by general practices were high in completion, successful and achieved improvement, but low in content quality. Completion, success and content quality of PDSA cycles were likely influenced by human or capital resources availability and training provided to general practices.

Professional diversification and developing new skillsets can assist general practitioners to sustain their own well-being and engagement with their work. Features that can mediate this relationship include value fulfilment, autonomy, variety, external supports, flexibility, and serendipity. This may help address the current international epidemic of burnout and workforce shortages in general practice.

PY23081The client and family experience of attending a nurse-led clinic for chronic wounds

Anusuya Dhar 0000-0002-0311-9563, Judith Needham, Michelle Gibb and Elisabeth Coyne

Nurse-led wound care has been shown to improve client outcomes, but there is minimal research on the lived experience of attending a nurse-led wound clinic. The findings demonstrate that clients and family members were satisfied with their experience in the nurse-led clinic, and highly regarded the expert advice they received and the physical accessibility of the location. To improve the client and family experience of the nurse-led clinic, there needs to be a greater focus on pain management, improving social support, providing client education and enabling cost-effective care.

Unintended pregnancy in the first year after birth is common. Unintended pregnancies and short interpregnancy intervals can have adverse effects on maternal, infant and child health. Contraception can support pregnancy planning. Opportunities to increase access to postpartum contraception in primary care include antenatal counselling, contraception provision during routine postnatal home visits, contraception provision during other postnatal appointments (e.g. well-baby checks), and pharmacist-led contraception provision. Improving access to postpartum contraception can support women in pregnancy planning and improve health outcomes.

PY23024Reducing antibiotic prescribing in general practice in Australia: a cluster randomised controlled trial of a multimodal intervention

Minyon L. Avent 0000-0001-7228-2834, Lisa Hall 0000-0002-9309-9315, Mieke van Driel, Annette Dobson, Laura Deckx, Mahmoud Galal, Malene Plejdrup Hansen 0000-0002-8444-1369 and Charles Gilks

Clinicians who work in primary care are potentially the most influential health care professionals to address the problem of antimicrobial resistance, because this is where most antibiotics are prescribed. We demonstrated that the implementation of a multimodal package of interventions for acute respiratory tract infections in general practice resulted in a reduction of prescriptions and were well received. Providing GPs with a choice of tools might enhance their uptake and support for antimicrobial stewardship in the community.

PY23039GP perspectives on a psychiatry phone line in Western Australia’s Great Southern region: implications for addressing rural GP workload

Beatriz Cuesta-Briand 0000-0002-5858-5713, Daniel Rock, Layale Tayba, James Hoimes, Hanh Ngo, Michael Taran and Mathew Coleman

GPs provide most of the mental health care and deal with an increasing number of patients with complex problems; this is more acute in rural areas where there are fewer services. This paper shows how a rural GP psychiatry phone line operated by local psychiatrists helps GPs manage their patients’ mental health problems and may, in turn, reduce the workload rural GPs experience. The results add to the limited evidence and have implications for other rural locations characterised by limited resources.

The COVID-19 pandemic has widened pre-existing health and social inequities and adversely impacted community mental health. In Tasmania, Australia, COVID-19 has exacerbated existing psychosocial and contextual stressors that underpin or perpetuate mental ill health, and highlighted existing gaps in Tasmania’s underdeveloped community mental health service sector, including limited service availability, accessibility, and capacity. These findings will inform the (re)design, resourcing, development, and implementation of community mental health services to address such inequities, reduce mental health burden, and enhance wellbeing.

Communicating health information can be a challenging skill to clinicians especially when working in Aboriginal health. Despite Aboriginal Health Community Controlled Health Organisations having enriched the experience of Aboriginal patients, there is limited research on the approaches adopted by general practitioners (GPs) working in these clinics. Our research combines thoughts from experienced and novice GPs who worked in Aboriginal Health, and shares some of their experiences related to communicating medical information with Aboriginal patients in this highly complex field.

PY22240E-prescription: views and acceptance of general practitioners and pharmacists in Greater Sydney

Phyllis Lau 0000-0002-0665-6348, Minh Thuan Tran 0000-0002-0857-8785, Ricky Yong Kim, Alsayed Hashem Alrefae, Sangwoo Ryu and Jim Chyuan Teh

It is inevitable that electronic prescriptions will one day supersede paper prescriptions, but there is resistance to their implementation at the practitioner and patient levels. This paper explored GPs and pharmacists’ experience and views, and found that while e-prescription improves the quality of patient care, there are several challenges to its effective use. Findings may inform the future promotion of e-prescription, particularly post-COVID-19 pandemic, and guide future research in exploring consumer perspectives.

Malnutrition and frailty are common in Australian and New Zealand communities, burdening individuals, health systems and the economy. This paper describes the process by which an evidence-informed guide for identifying and managing these conditions in the community was developed. The guide is now freely available online and can be used by all healthcare professionals across several settings, and our description of the process might be informative to others who are developing such tools to guide practice in their healthcare environment.

Capacity-building programs are necessary for advancing new public health initiatives, yet there remains limited evidence to inform best practices for delivering these in the context of mental health. This paper describes the design and findings of a capacity-building program developed to enhance the knowledge and skills of community-based mental health providers. From this evaluation, we recommend the following to ensure effective capacity-building programs: identify relevant functions (e.g. prioritise networking), select the right mode of delivery (e.g. establish an online presence) and abide by key principles (e.g. be responsive to staff needs).

PY22181Barriers and facilitators to adherence to Optimal Care Pathways for diagnosis and treatment of cancer for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people

Rowena Ivers, Michelle Dickson, Kathleen Taylor, Trish Levett, Kyla Wynn, Janelle Trees, Emma Webster, Gail Garvey, Joan Cunningham, Lisa Whop and Abbey Diaz

This qualitative project involves Yarns with 30 health professionals in Aboriginal community-controlled services and other services, and addresses barriers and facilitators to adherence to Optimal Care Pathways for diagnosis and treatment of cancer for Aboriginal people.

The authors compared the experiences of general practitioners who did and did not remain in Aboriginal health after completing an Aboriginal health placement as a GP registrar. Despite largely similar experiences, those who left placed stronger emphasis on certain barriers, whereas those who remained more proactively addressed barriers and adopted more of an external focus. The results highlight strategies for better supporting trainees to remain in Aboriginal health.

Lesbian, bisexual+ and queer (LBQ+) cisgender women’s unmet mental health needs have been extensively documented. We found that continuity of care and disclosure of sexual orientation in general practice may facilitate their access to mental health services in general, as well as LGBTQA+ inclusive mental services; yet GPs appear to be missing opportunities to develop continuity of care and trusting relationships with this population. Improving LGBTQA+ inclusive practice among GPs would ensure more accurate clinical assessment and linkage to appropriate forms of mental health support..

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Best Oral Paper Prize AAAPC 2024

Joanne Wong has been awarded the Best Oral Paper Prize for 2024.

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