Understanding primary care perspectives on supporting women's health needs: a qualitative study

CONCLUSION: The findings show that relationships and advocacy are valued as fundamental for women's health in general practice, and highlight the adverse impact of threats to these on staff and services. Developing specialist roles and bespoke services can foster staff wellbeing and could support retention. However, care is needed to ensure that service configuration changes do not result in clinician deskilling or rendering services inaccessible. Care is needed when services evolve to ensure that core aspects of general practice are not diminished or devalued. GP teams are well placed to advocate for their patients, including commitment to seeking equitable care, and these skills and specialist knowledge should be actively recognised, valued, and nurtured.PMID:37722855 | DOI:10.3399/BJGP.2023.0141
Source: The British Journal of General Practice - Category: Primary Care Authors: Source Type: research