Developing generalism in the South African context

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Authors

Howe, A.C.
Mash, Robert J.
Hugo, Johannes F.M.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Health and Medical Publishing Group

Abstract

The largest impact on the South African burden of disease will be made in community-based and primary healthcare (PHC) settings and not in referral hospitals. Medical generalism is an approach to the delivery of healthcare that routinely applies a broad and holistic perspective to the patient’s problems and is a feature of PHC. A multi-professional team of generalists, who share similar values and principles, is needed to make this a reality. Ward-based outreach teams include community health workers and nurses with essential support from doctors. Expert generalists – family physicians – are required to support PHC as well as provide care at the district hospital. All require sufficient training, at scale, with greater collaboration and integration between training programmes. District clinical specialist teams are both an opportunity and a threat. The value of medical generalism needs to be explained, advocated and communicated more actively.

Description

This article is based in part on keynote addresses given by Proff A C Howe and J F M Hugo at the 16th National Family Practitioners Conference in Cape Town, SA, in May 2013 themed ‘Reclaiming Generalism.’

Keywords

Primary health care (PHC), Medical generalism, Patient’s problems, Community-based healthcare

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Howe, AC, Mash, RJ & Hugo, JFM 2013, 'Developing generalism in the South African context', South African Medical Journal, vol. 103, no. 12, pp. 899-900.