BMJ 2005;330:651-653 (19 March), doi:10.1136/bmj.330.7492.651
Education and debate
Role of specialists in common chronic diseases
Linda Gask, professor of primary care psychiatry1
1 National Primary Care Research and Development Centre, University of Manchester, Manchester M13 9DL Linda Gask linda.gask@manchester.ac.uk
Consultant care is currently available to only a small proportion of people with chronic illness. How can we enable many more people to benefit from specialist expertise?
| The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
Introduction
Most people with chronic conditions such as diabetes, congestive
heart failure, asthma, and depression are managed in primary
care. NHS consultants have traditionally confined their role
to patients who are referred to outpatient clinics by their
general practitioners. Such patients usually have the most severe
and complex problems. Effective care teams for chronic illness
must be able to cross practice or organisational boundaries,
1 but the current organisational structure of the NHS does not
provide many incentives to develop such linkages. General practitioners
refer patients they cannot manage and hospitals are funded on
the basis of referrals. Time spent on joint work with primary
care is not accounted for. To ensure that all patients get the
best treatment, the role of consultants needs to change so that
their specialist knowledge is more available to everyone dealing
with chronic disease.
Changing roles
In recent years nurses in the NHS have taken on a larger
. . . [Full text of this article]
Population perspective
Designing stepped care pathways
New role
Conclusions

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