2006
DOI: 10.5694/j.1326-5377.2006.tb00711.x
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General practice: professional preparation for a pandemic

Abstract: General practice will play a key role in both prevention and management of an influenza pandemic. Australian pandemic plans acknowledge a role for general practice, but there are few published data addressing the issues that general practitioners and their practices will face in dealing with such a crisis. The outcome will revolve around preparation in three key areas: ➢Definition of the role of general practice within a broad primary care pandemic response, and adequate preparation within general practices so… Show more

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Cited by 23 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…The first, prevention and treatment of influenza, includes care for the surge in patients with acute respiratory illness, and for people at high risk of exposure to, or complications from, influenza. These aspects are discussed extensively in the literature [20][21][22][23]. Most people with influenza can be managed in the community, protecting hospitals by delaying or avoiding admission and facilitating early discharge.…”
Section: Clinical Carementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The first, prevention and treatment of influenza, includes care for the surge in patients with acute respiratory illness, and for people at high risk of exposure to, or complications from, influenza. These aspects are discussed extensively in the literature [20][21][22][23]. Most people with influenza can be managed in the community, protecting hospitals by delaying or avoiding admission and facilitating early discharge.…”
Section: Clinical Carementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Pandemic preparedness plans have mainly emphasized hospital preparedness. Although there have been some attempts to include primary care, implementation of primary care preparedness and response has not been adequately addressed [16,17]. There have been few reports on the preparedness of individual PCPs to respond to emerging respiratory infectious diseases, and on the effect of planning on individual preparedness.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Australia, the implementation of the “Contain” strategy lasted for several weeks in some Australian states, prior to switching to a more proportionate “Protect” phase given the generally mild nature of observed disease. In the planning phase, sufficient stockpiling and distribution of resources, along with rapid and clear two-way communications were identified as critical determinants of success both within Australia [22], [23] and internationally [19], [20]. Further issues identified in the media and medical press by critics of the pandemic response included excessive administrative burden on general practices (GPs), delays in receiving test results, centralised bottlenecks, a lack of clear communication, updates to the AHMPPI that some considered “not entirely workable” and that were applied inconsistently, inadequately detailed planning and other real-world complexities [21], [24][26].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%