The COVID-19 pandemic has caused a significant disruption to general practice, and its impact on patient-centred care is not yet understood.
Consumers with chronic medical conditions may not readily embrace Health Care Home practice redesign initiatives in Australia.
Characterising the general practice response to the COVID-19 pandemic is important for ongoing policy planning.
Prognostic uncertainty delays discussions and leads to unnecessary treatments for older patients who are dying.
Text-based e-mental health programs may worsen the treatment gap for disadvantaged patients because of inherent high literacy requirements.
A simulation model of the general practice nurse workforce from 2012 to 2025 a likely shortage of the workforce, but this shortage could be reduced through recruitment and retention strategies.
This paper examines the importance of, and challenges in, measuring and promoting continuity of care in Australia.
Healthcare professionals would generally like to increase their electronic correspondence, yet most are currently faxing or posting their correspondence.
Concise, clear and practical resources can support general practitioners when identifying whom to test for hepatitis B.
This paper explores the main issues associated with the use of primary care data for research and proposed solutions to address them.
This study examined the effectiveness of a general practice nurse intervention to reduce blood pressure in adults with hypertension who are at high risk of cardiovascular disease.
A high proportion of early-career general practitioners working part time in clinical general practice has implications for workplace planning.
Refugee women exhibit some of the highest rates of chronic pain, but the relationship between chronic pain and refugee-related challenges arising from migration trajectories remains unclear.
While Australian general practitioners gain most of their income from direct patient interactions, they also spend time attending to professional or practice responsibilities.
Home visits may change patients’ healthcare resource utilisation, including hospital admission, medications, outpatient and emergency room visits.