Theme Description: Primary care organizations serve communities with diverse populations facing unique needs and barriers. Identifying needs and planning programs to improve population health and achieve greater equity requires engagement and collaboration with patients and other community partners. Presentations in this stream will include population-based approaches to program planning; methods for identifying community needs, potential partners, and funding for patient and population needs. A3 Cardiac Rehab in rural Primary Care: it takes a community. Prince Edward County is a rural (island) community, populated primarily by seniors and with a high prevalence of cardiovascular disease. A Cardiac Rehab program in Kingston required a 200 km round trip by car twice weekly, no public transportation is available and very few patients were attending following their cardiac event. The rural community spirit kicked in and within a year, a fully equipped exercise area was made available through local fund raising events. A comprehensive medically supervised program of exercise and education, followed by supporting community activities and planned events, is now available to our patients requiring cardiac rehabilitation. B3 Knowledge to Action: “Health Checks”, A Clinical Innovation in Comprehensive Primary Care of Adults with Developmental Disabilities (presentation to follow) The presentation will be introduced by researchers with a brief description of the “knowledge” that comes from a unique database linking the Ontario Ministries of Health and Long-Term Care and Community and Social Services and identifying a cohort of over 65,000 adults with developmental disabilities. This has yielded information about use of primary care services, hospitalizations, rates of annual preventive health exams, cancer screening, and medication use. C3 Development of a Teen Group at a FHT (presentation to follow) This presentation will explore the development of the Teen Group at the Stonechurch Family Health Centre, part of the McMaster Family Health Team. The experience of this site may help inform other FHTs about possible use of group methodology when working with teens. Some teens to date have indicated a preference for group therapy over individual therapy. Group therapy appears to provide an effective cost-effective treatment modality that is well received by the teens, and has produced promising results. D3 “It makes you feel more like a person than a patient”: Findings from patients receiving integrated home-based primary care (IHBPC) services in Toronto, Ontario A successful health care system will be one in which there is seamless integration and collaboration across care sectors. Innovative approaches are also needed to contend with the complex and inter-related health and social problems faced by the frail older adult population. One approach that is gaining momentum is the home-based primary care (HBPC) model. We add the word ‘integrated’ to describe our HBPC model (renamed IHBPC), recognizing the importance of fully integrating medical, cognitive and social care services at the point of care. This model reflects these key design features: the provision of ongoing, comprehensive medical and social care to frail older adults, interprofessional team service delivery and after hours availability for urgent issues. E3 Addressing income security within a primary health care setting: Lessons learned (presentation to follow) A large body of literature links income security with health, yet interventions to improve income security rarely exist in our health care system. First, we will present a conceptual model of how income security health promotion works within primary health care. Second, we will discuss lessons learned from engaging in income security health promotion at the St. Michael’s Hospital Academic Family Health Team over the past six months. Third, we will discuss our plans for a pragmatic randomized controlled trial, the IGNITE (addressInG iNcome securITy in primary carE) Study. F3 Primary Care Outreach and Connection in Rural Communities The Rural Wellington Community Team (RWCT) was born out of the statement “we don’t know what we don’t know”. This presentation will review the barriers and gaps that patients experience and the resulting effects on their health that are often unidentified.
Leave a Reply