Primary Care in Denmark: Contributions to statistics about utilization of general practice by Andersen JS. OECD Reviews of Health Systems

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til rapportForskning

Standard

Primary Care in Denmark : Contributions to statistics about utilization of general practice by Andersen JS. OECD Reviews of Health Systems. / Andersen, John Sahl.

OECD Reviews of Health Systems. OECD Publishing.. OECD Publishing, 2017.

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til rapportForskning

Harvard

Andersen, JS 2017, Primary Care in Denmark: Contributions to statistics about utilization of general practice by Andersen JS. OECD Reviews of Health Systems. i OECD Reviews of Health Systems. OECD Publishing.. OECD Publishing.

APA

Andersen, J. S. (2017). Primary Care in Denmark: Contributions to statistics about utilization of general practice by Andersen JS. OECD Reviews of Health Systems. I OECD Reviews of Health Systems. OECD Publishing. OECD Publishing.

Vancouver

Andersen JS. Primary Care in Denmark: Contributions to statistics about utilization of general practice by Andersen JS. OECD Reviews of Health Systems. I OECD Reviews of Health Systems. OECD Publishing.. OECD Publishing. 2017

Author

Andersen, John Sahl. / Primary Care in Denmark : Contributions to statistics about utilization of general practice by Andersen JS. OECD Reviews of Health Systems. OECD Reviews of Health Systems. OECD Publishing.. OECD Publishing, 2017.

Bibtex

@inbook{f434e0a2e0f84228bfa757da703c8592,
title = "Primary Care in Denmark: Contributions to statistics about utilization of general practice by Andersen JS. OECD Reviews of Health Systems",
abstract = "KEY FINDINGSPrimary care is well-established at the heart of the Danish healthcare system. Danes rate the care given by their GP highly, with 91% giving a positive assessment compared to a European Union average of 84%But high-quality primary care is not always delivered. Rates of avoidable hospitalisation for people with chronic bronchitis or diabetes are higher in Denmark than in Sweden or Norway, and avoidable admissions for people aged over 65 vary two-fold across Danish municipalitiesMore broadly, the Danish healthcare system is evolving rapidly. After a heart attack, Danes spend just under four days in hospital – the fastest discharge time in the OECD – underlining the need for high-quality primary care across the countryBetter data is key to improving performance. But DAMD, the national information system that used to monitor primary care healthcare needs, activities and patient outcomes, collapsed in 2014. Denmark is now one of the few countries in the OECD with no means of monitoring primary care performance. Patients also lost the ability to ability to access their care records – critical to those living with long-term conditions like diabetesPayment systems also need reform, to better reward the quality of care. The fee-for-service model dominates in Danish primary care – rewarding activity, not outcomes. There is also substantial scope to develop the role of primary care nurses, and to develop more effective collaboration between GPs and municipalities at local level",
author = "Andersen, {John Sahl}",
year = "2017",
language = "Dansk",
booktitle = "OECD Reviews of Health Systems. OECD Publishing.",
publisher = "OECD Publishing",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Primary Care in Denmark

T2 - Contributions to statistics about utilization of general practice by Andersen JS. OECD Reviews of Health Systems

AU - Andersen, John Sahl

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - KEY FINDINGSPrimary care is well-established at the heart of the Danish healthcare system. Danes rate the care given by their GP highly, with 91% giving a positive assessment compared to a European Union average of 84%But high-quality primary care is not always delivered. Rates of avoidable hospitalisation for people with chronic bronchitis or diabetes are higher in Denmark than in Sweden or Norway, and avoidable admissions for people aged over 65 vary two-fold across Danish municipalitiesMore broadly, the Danish healthcare system is evolving rapidly. After a heart attack, Danes spend just under four days in hospital – the fastest discharge time in the OECD – underlining the need for high-quality primary care across the countryBetter data is key to improving performance. But DAMD, the national information system that used to monitor primary care healthcare needs, activities and patient outcomes, collapsed in 2014. Denmark is now one of the few countries in the OECD with no means of monitoring primary care performance. Patients also lost the ability to ability to access their care records – critical to those living with long-term conditions like diabetesPayment systems also need reform, to better reward the quality of care. The fee-for-service model dominates in Danish primary care – rewarding activity, not outcomes. There is also substantial scope to develop the role of primary care nurses, and to develop more effective collaboration between GPs and municipalities at local level

AB - KEY FINDINGSPrimary care is well-established at the heart of the Danish healthcare system. Danes rate the care given by their GP highly, with 91% giving a positive assessment compared to a European Union average of 84%But high-quality primary care is not always delivered. Rates of avoidable hospitalisation for people with chronic bronchitis or diabetes are higher in Denmark than in Sweden or Norway, and avoidable admissions for people aged over 65 vary two-fold across Danish municipalitiesMore broadly, the Danish healthcare system is evolving rapidly. After a heart attack, Danes spend just under four days in hospital – the fastest discharge time in the OECD – underlining the need for high-quality primary care across the countryBetter data is key to improving performance. But DAMD, the national information system that used to monitor primary care healthcare needs, activities and patient outcomes, collapsed in 2014. Denmark is now one of the few countries in the OECD with no means of monitoring primary care performance. Patients also lost the ability to ability to access their care records – critical to those living with long-term conditions like diabetesPayment systems also need reform, to better reward the quality of care. The fee-for-service model dominates in Danish primary care – rewarding activity, not outcomes. There is also substantial scope to develop the role of primary care nurses, and to develop more effective collaboration between GPs and municipalities at local level

UR - https://www.oecd.org/els/health-systems/primary-care-in-denmark-9789264269453-en.htm

M3 - Bidrag til rapport

BT - OECD Reviews of Health Systems. OECD Publishing.

PB - OECD Publishing

ER -

ID: 386412712