Primary Care Summit 2024 Wrap-up
Credit to Yvonne Yong, Health Design Lab

Primary Care Summit 2024 Wrap-up

It’s been three days of rich, pragmatic, and ambitious discussion on navigating the barriers, enablers, and key mechanisms for realising a vision for amplifying the integral role that primary care plays in supporting us to focus on individual and population health and wellness.

What is clear is the transformational opportunity we have to reinvigorate the policy, strategic, funding, digital and data, and human-centred approaches to shifting the national health landscape to a system that supports health and wellness instead of just servicing sickness.


Some significant reflections and learnings I have are:

  • The desire amongst the General Practice and PHN community to drive and inform change, in partnership with policymakers, to re-centre approaches to and enablers of care around a core humanity and the relationships between clinicians and patients - to shift from transactional care that rewards activity over improvements to approaches which measure experiences and outcomes.
  • That strengthening Medicare is at its core an opportunity to integrate people, systems, and funding to achieve meaningful outcomes and bring joy back to general practice.
  • That there is a clear need to address the space between patient care interactions with their GP’s - a space for which existing funding arrangements are not compatible with. In reality, by leveraging a multidisciplinary teams approach that reflects patient needs and utilising blended funding models, there is within that space between an opportunity to strengthen proactive and preventative health and wellbeing support and keep people in the community and out of high cost, carbon intensive, and often traumatic hospital admissions.


Some key reflections specific to how we most meaningfully leverage practicing partnerships with lived-experience and use data to drive decision-making are:

  1. That value often defines the communities we gravitate towards. Those communities inform and shape culture. Culture drives practice, processes, partnerships, data - and most importantly our appetite for diverse and collaboratively informed change.
  2. When we collaborate to clarify and align our values, and are flexible in our approaches - informed by practicing partnerships with lived-experience - we can meaningfully design and fund for impact.
  3. That one immediately actionable step we can take tomorrow, at the level of care interactions between patients and their doctor, is to shift our language and conversation from a focus on asking “what’s the matter with you?” to “what matters to you?”
  4. That we have a wealth in waiting of patients eager to provide patient reported outcomes measures (PREM's) and patient reported experience measures (PROM's) that we can, and should, be harnessing at a practitioner, practice, and systems level to benchmark care impact and support a shift to value based care.

There is so much more that was discussed and so generously shared, so I encourage you to keep your eyes open as other attendees and contributing organisations release their own (no doubt comprehensive) syntheses of key themes that will fuel what I’m confident is a core reform narrative in our national effort to design and build an inclusive, equitable, sustainable, enduring, and impactful health and well-being system.

Shelley Thomson

I help health leaders, practice owners and managers learn and implement value-based health care, PREMs & PROMs, and partner with patients to improve outcomes that matter.

1w

It was a privilege to sit alongside Harry Iles-Mann and Sari McKinnon during our panel session about "Distilling Value to Drive Digital Enablement: Consumer Perspectives on Data in Primary Care." Thank you to Belinda Swan for her facilitation and Yvonne Y. for her insightful human-centred design interpretation. As you can see from the graphic transcription, we identified the five key goals of value-based care: providing the best patient experience, Improving patient outcomes, advancing health equity, supporting the well-being of the healthcare workforce, and delivering healthcare services at a reasonable cost. Patient experience tops the list, as it identifies what patients value most. This shift towards value-based care requires trust, transparency, and a focus on the patient’s voice to guide improvements in care. Data and digital health are critical enablers in this transition. By leveraging digital tools, we can capture patient-reported outcomes and enable real-time data sharing to support multidisciplinary teams and patients in making informed decisions. Excited to continue this journey and drive impactful change in our healthcare system! #VBHC #DigitalHealth #PatientCentredCare #HealthcareInnovation #ValueBasedCare

Kerri Ryan

Engagement Lead | Deputy Director, Clinical Engagement at eHealth NSW

1w

Great to hear you’re perspectives Harry! While I didn’t attend I too have hope for the future of a wonderful experience for all Australians in being engaged and at the centre of care! Congratulations to you on your journey and most of all for your courage and commitment to consumers being heard and seen in our everyday care!

Basim Alansari

Seasoned Healthcare Executive, Advisor and Consultant | Experienced Board Director

1w

Well written brief Harry! It’s important to note that creating a culturally safe, inclusive and accessible environment only can be achieved when everyone is genuinely engaged. I dream of a time when our healthcare system sees this engagement as a two way mutual connection rather than one way awareness and information sharing exchange.

Andrew Newton JP

Chief Executive Officer - WentWest - Western Sydney PHN Vice President - NSW Branch - Australasian College of Health Service Management (ACHSM)

2w

You ran a great session, Harry. The summary above captures it well. See you at Rosehill on 21 Sept. Cheers. AN

To view or add a comment, sign in

Insights from the community

Others also viewed

Explore topics