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The Evidence-Based Primary Care Handbook

Edited by Mark Gabbay


Paperback
£23.99

ISBN: 9781853154157
Published: 01/07/1999
Extent: 328 pages


 
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Summary:

Here at last is a realistic and practical book that shows how evidence-based practice can be successfully applied in a primary care setting.

The first section provides an introduction to the principles of evidence-based health care as they apply to primary care, and many other books on this subject stop right there. However, Section 3 practises what this first section preaches, by applying these tools to 15 common clinical problems in primary care, such as sore throat, asthma, urinary tract infections, low back pain and heart failure.

In between, Section 2 focuses on topics of particular relevance to planners and to Primary Care Groups (PCGs), and includes chapters on commissioning, prescribing issues and health economics.

The authors are all familiar with primary care as clinicians and/or researchers, and understand the reality of practising evidence-based medicine in primary care - for example, how to cope in the absence of 'best evidence', or how to search for evidence when time is very limited.

GPs, primary care nurses, PCG managers, practice managers, community pharmacists and all other members of the primary health care team will find this book challenging, informative and relevant.


  • Relevant to all members of the primary care team 

  • Philosophical approach will benefit decision making and standards of care throughout services

  • Contents reflect a diversity of opinions and enables readers to gain a wider perspective

  • Read this book and you will find it challenging, informative and relevant


Table of Contents:
List of contributors
Preface
Acknowledgements
SECTION 1: GENERAL ISSUES IN EVIDENCE-BASED PRIMARY CARE
1. Why Evidence-Based Health
2. A Guide to Reading
3. A Guide to Literature Sources
4. Clinical Practice Guidelines and Primary Care
5. Dissemination and Implentation Strategies
6. Using Evidence-Based Health in Learning and Development
7. Nursing and Evidence-Based Practice: A World Away from Evidence-Based Health
8. Evidence-Based Health, Patient Consent and Consumerism
9. Patient Involvement in Evidence-Based Health in Relation to Clinical Guidelines
SECTION 2: EVIDENCE-BASED PRIMARY CARE COMMISSIONING AND PRESCRIBING
10. Fundamental Statistics for Evidence-Based Health in Primary Care
11. Evidence-Based Commissioning in Primary Care
12. Commissioning Stroke Services
13. Economics-Based Medical Practice: Using Evidence to Capture and Release Resources
14. Using Evidence from Economic Studies to Inform Service Development in General Medicine Practice
15. Prescribing Dilemmas: A Barrier to Evidence-Based Health
16. Role of Pharmacist in Evidence-Based Prescribing in Primary Care
17. Evidence in Practice: A Review of 18 Months of Evidence-Based General Practice
SECTION 3: EVIDENCE-BASED PRIMARY CARE IN PRACTICE
18. Sore Throat
19. Sinusitis
20. Depression
21. Anxiety
22. Headache Diagnosis: When is a Migraine not a Middle Class Tension Headache?
23. Mastalgia
24. Prostate Screening: A Decision Analysis
25. Urinary Tract Infections: Test or Treat and How to Treat?
26. Helicobacter Pylori
27. The Trouble with Head Lice
28. Leg Ulcers and Fever in Children: Finding Evidence for Non-Medics
29. Heart Failure Guidelines
30. Low Back Pain
31. Asthma
32. Secondary Prevention of Coronary Artery Disease
Epilogue
Appendix: Useful sources of evidence for primary care
Index


About the Author(s):

Mark Gabbay FRCGP Dip Psychotherapy DFFP
Senior Lecturer in General Practice, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK


Readership:
GPs, primary care nurses, managers, practice managers, pharmacists and all members of the primary care team


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