Jump to: Page Content, Site Navigation, Site Search,
You are seeing this message because your web browser does not support basic web standards. Find out more about why this message is appearing and what you can do to make your experience on this site better.
Socioeconomic factors, disabilities, and comorbid conditions are obstacles
This special issue of the BMJ and this
month's issue of the Western Journal of Medicine once again
focus on the needs of patients with chronic illness, on the advances in
clinical and behavioural management, and on the challenges of assuring
that patients receive optimal care. Achieving such optimal care
challenges both patients and their care givers. This is especially so
in developing countries, which are facing rapid increases in the
prevalences of major chronic diseases.
Evidence based care for many chronic illnesses requires increasingly
complicated drug regimens, ongoing support of self management, and
close monitoring. Articles in this week's BMJ describe
modern management for coronary heart disease, diabetes, asthma, and
anticoagulation therapy. They emphasise that achieving the best
possible outcomes depends on competent self management and decision
making by patients, as well as clinical treatments.
But audits and surveys of medical practice continue to attest to the
difficulty of assuring that most patients receive such care.
1 2
Many chronically ill patients have socioeconomic factors, disabilities, and comorbid conditions that make it harder for
practitioners and practice systems to help them. In Western countries,
people from ethnic minorities often receive poorer care and experience
worse outcomes in chronic disease than the rest of the population. For
example, Griffiths et al describe the variety of barriers to good care
that probably contribute to the high rates of hospital admission for
South Asian patients with asthma in East London (p 962).3
Many doctors and practice settings are poorly equipped to care for
patients with disabilities and chronic illness. Cheng et al found that
patients with multiple sclerosis and considerable disability were less
likely to receive appropriate preventive care than those with less
disability, despite their undiminished life expectancy
(p 968).4 Comorbidity is a huge problem, providing
further obstacles to high quality care. Nearly two thirds of Americans
aged 65 or older have two or more chronic conditions, and one quarter
have four or more conditions (Gerard Anderson, personal communication).
A recent study in Canada found that patients with diabetes, emphysema,
and severe mental disorders were less likely than patients without
these conditions to receive appropriate oestrogen replacement therapy,
lipid lowering medications, or treatment for arthritis.5 Two papers in the companion theme issue of the Western
Journal of Medicine
6 7
discuss the frequent
co-occurrence of mental disorders and other chronic diseases, the
negative health impacts of this interaction, and the difficulties of
appropriate detection and treatment.
Given the importance of preventive care, managing comorbidity, and
coordinating care, primary care will and should remain the best
healthcare setting for most chronically ill patients. But treatments
are advancing rapidly and becoming more complex, and it is essential
that primary care has the necessary expertise to manage chronic
diseases. Consistent evidence indicates that specialists are more
knowledgeable about the management of conditions associated with their
specialty and more likely to practise in accordance with
guidelines.
8 9
The challenge is to reach more patients
with specialist expertise without massive translocations of care.
Shared care arrangements hold real promise and deserve more intensive
study.10
A recent report from the US Institute of Medicine on the
"quality chasm" in health care concluded that "trying harder will not work, changing systems will."1 The paper by
Olivarius et al in this issue illustrates the point
(p 970).11 Representative Danish general practices
significantly improved long term control of diabetes through a variety
of educational interventions and prompts for the doctors and through
structured care offering patients planned, quarterly consultations.
These visits enabled patients and their doctors to set treatment goals
aimed at reducing cardiovascular risk factors.
The system changes that improve care of diabetes are essentially
the same as those found to improve care for other chronic conditions.
Collectively, these changes equip healthcare teams with relevant data
and skills and enable them to interact more productively, and they
provide patients with the information, skills, and confidence to manage
their health wisely. The chronic care model developed by the MacColl
Institute for Healthcare Innovation,12 an attempt to
synthesise these concepts of system change, has been used in more than
300 healthcare organisations in the United States.
It has been almost two years since our first theme issue on the
management of chronic diseases, and there has clearly been substantial
progress since. We hope that our third theme issue, scheduled for
October 2002, will present evidence of more widespread diffusion of
these advances.
MacColl Institute for Healthcare Innovation, Center for Health
Studies, Group Health Cooperative of Puget Sound, Seattle, WA
98101-1448, USA (wagner.e{at}ghc.org)
| 1. | Institute of Medicine. Crossing the quality chasm: a new health system for the 21st century. Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 2001. |
| 2. |
Campbell SM, Hann M, Hacker J, Burns C, Oliver D, Thapar A, Mead N, Safran DG, Roland MO.
Identifying predictors of high quality care in English general practice: observational study.
BMJ
2001;
323:
784 |
| 3. |
Griffiths C, Kaur G, Gantley M, Feder G, Hillier S, Goddard J, et al.
Influences on hospital admission for asthma in south Asian and white adults: qualitative interview study.
BMJ
2001;
323:
962-966 |
| 4. |
Cheng E, Myers L, Wolf S, Shatin D, Cui XP, Ellison G, et al.
Mobility impairments and use of preventive services in women with multiple sclerosis: observational study.
BMJ
2001;
323:
968-969 |
| 5. |
Redelmeier DA, Tan SH, Booth GL.
The treatment of unrelated disorders in patients with chronic medical diseases.
N Engl J Med
1998;
338:
1516-1520 |
| 6. | Simon GE. Treating depression in patients with chronic disease. West J Med 2001; 175: 292-293[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 7. | Osborn DPJ. The poor physical health of people with mental illness. West J Med 2001; 175: 329-332[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 8. | Harrold LR, Field TS, Gurwitz JH. Knowledge, patterns of care, and outcomes of care for generalists and specialists. J Gen Intern Med 1999; 14: 499-511[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 9. |
Donohoe MT.
Comparing generalist and specialty care: discrepancies, deficiencies, and excesses.
Arch Intern Med
1998;
158:
1596-1608 |
| 10. |
Kvamme OJ, Olesen F, Samuelson M.
Improving the interface between primary and secondary care: a statement from the European Working Party on Quality in Family Practice (EQuiP).
Qual Health Care
2001;
10:
33-39 |
| 11. |
Olivarius NdF, Beck-Nielsen H, Andreasen AH, Hørder M, Pedersen PA.
Randomised cotnrolled trial of structured personal care of type 2 diabetes mellitus.
BMJ
2001;
323:
970-975 |
| 12. | Wagner EH, Glasgow RE, Davis C, Bonomi AE, Provost L, McCulloch D. Quality improvement in chronic illness care: a collaborative approach. Jt Comm J Qual Improv 2001; 27: 63-80[Medline]. |
Read all Rapid Responses