Health creation : how can primary care networks succeed in reducing health inequalities?
by The Health Creation Alliance (THCA); Royal College of General Practitioners. Health Inequalities Standing Group (RCGP HISG).
Publisher: Health Creation Alliance, London : 2021.Description: 13p.Summary: Health creation is a route to wellness. It comes about when local people and professionals work together as equal partners and focus on what matters to people and their communities. This comes from the premis that people and communities are part of the health system and not separate from it, and that lasting improvements in health inequalities will only be possible through partnership with communities. THCA, together with the Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP) Health Inequalities Standing Group (HISG), held a series of multi-stakeholder events held between February and September 2020. These considered how general practice and primary care work differently with communities and local partners to reduce health inequalities and what can primary care networks do to enable and create the conditions for practices to work differently with local partners to reduce health inequalities. This report summarises the discussions..Subject(s): patient & public involvement | general practice | primary care networks | service development | patient participation | local communities | partnerships | health improvement | health inequalities | views | primary care networks | general practiceDigital copyAvailability: Online access | Online access Note: ; THCA publications. List(s) this item appears in: Public involvement in health services [October 2023] | Primary care networks (PCNs) [June 2023] | Health inequalities [October 2023]
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Web publication | The King's Fund Library Online resource | Web publications and sites | Web publications (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not for loan |
Health creation is a route to wellness. It comes about when local people and professionals work together as equal partners and focus on what matters to people and their communities. This comes from the premis that people and communities are part of the health system and not separate from it, and that lasting improvements in health inequalities will only be possible through partnership with communities. THCA, together with the Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP) Health Inequalities Standing Group (HISG), held a series of multi-stakeholder events held between February and September 2020. These considered how general practice and primary care work differently with communities and local partners to reduce health inequalities and what can primary care networks do to enable and create the conditions for practices to work differently with local partners to reduce health inequalities. This report summarises the discussions.
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