At the heart of the Primary Care Strategy is the aim of developing services in the community to give people direct access to integrated multi-disciplinary teams of general practitioners, nurses, home helps, physiotherapists, occupational therapists and other health care professionals. The Strategy is also about the reorientation of existing resources to develop new ways for health and social care professionals to work together for the benefit of people accessing primary care services in their own communities.
Currently, there are 348 Primary Care Teams operating (holding clinical team meetings on individual client cases and involving GPs and HSE staff) and providing services for over 2.6 million people. The Health Service Executive has identified 527 Primary Care Teams (PCTs) for development by the end of 2011.
Where possible, PCTs are based in a single facility to provide easy accessibility for patients and to enhance multi-disciplinary teamwork. However, there is ample worldwide evidence that health professionals can work effectively together while being based in different locations. I set out a table giving an indication of the infrastructure in place for the current Teams.
Description
|
Number of PCTs
|
% of Overall
|
Team fully co-located (all members of the team in the same building)
|
30
|
9%
|
HSE staff members co-located- GPs not in the same building
|
80
|
23%
|
HSE staff do not all share the same building- GPs not co-located
|
151
|
43%
|
PCT not fully co-located while awaiting completion of a Primary Care Centre which is under development
|
74
|
21%
|
Other (HSE staff & GPs co-located in more than 1 building)
|
13
|
4%
|
Total
|
348
|
100%
|