Facilitating the future of small rural hospitals

IF 1.9 4区 医学 Q2 NURSING Australian Journal of Rural Health Pub Date : 2024-12-13 DOI:10.1111/ajr.13205
Stephen Duckett PhD, DSc, FASSA, FAHMS
{"title":"Facilitating the future of small rural hospitals","authors":"Stephen Duckett PhD, DSc, FASSA, FAHMS","doi":"10.1111/ajr.13205","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>I'm not a rural person. I was born in Sydney; I now live in Melbourne. I've never lived in a small town, so I feel like somewhat of a fraud talking about the future of small rural hospitals. In the past, my attitude towards rural health care could be characterised as benign neglect, with an important exception I'll come to. For some of my career, I was responsible for budgets and budget savings in particular. My view then was that the big money is in the big hospitals, so I didn't look to rural closures or amalgamations to solve budget deficits. This is still my view.</p><p>Almost a decade ago, I was asked to lead a review of quality and safety in Victorian hospitals following tragic outcomes at Bacchus Marsh Hospital associated with poor clinical governance. As part of that review, I was forced to think more carefully about the trade-offs involved in rural health provision, between access, the workforce and clinical governance challenges, and the broader role of hospitals that I will talk about later.</p><p>Victoria has seen a flurry of amalgamation talk over the last year with on again—off again—on again oscillations favouring mergers either forced or voluntary. There are good reasons to argue for amalgamations—particularly those that are voluntary—as they can create improvements for both staff and communities in rural Victoria as our Grampians Health case study shows.<span><sup>1</sup></span></p><p>Money is not the only reason to look to amalgamations, care quality is another and my observation—based on anecdote only I'm afraid—is that there are significant weaknesses in clinical governance in some small hospitals that need to be addressed. Part-time, advisory medical administrative oversight, especially without clear and transparent lines of accountability, has been shown to be a recipe for disaster (Medical Board of Australia v Dr. Gruner (Review and Regulation) (2022) VCAT 1116; Medical Board of Australia v Dr. Gruner (Review and Regulation) (2023) VCAT 273). Medical practitioners in some cases are able to hold small communities and their hospitals to ransom.</p><p>But I think the obsession with structural solutions is not the place to start. The critical issue to address is workforce, and not enough is being done about this. Secondly, and what I want to focus most of this talk on, is thinking through what a small rural hospital is, as we move into the second quarter of this century. The failure to fully understand the role that small hospitals play contributes to muddled policy thinking and poor policy prescriptions.</p><p>But first workforce. Australia has a plethora of rural workforce incentives, policies and strategies. They are interacting, overlapping, expensive and ineffective. If you add them all up, you might even have one program for every rural doctor! Unfortunately, this mish mash seems to me to be developed by bureaucrats and politicians who look for solutions in the wrong place.</p><p>If we conceptualise the problem as too many well-paid specialists concentrated in the more affluent areas of east coast cities, the solution may take a different form. We might then have smaller intakes into metropolitan medical schools, offset by increased intakes into rural schools. The evidence is that students who grow up rurally, go to school rurally and go to university rurally tend to practice rurally. What a shock. So, I am proud that when I was a Canberra bureaucrat, I stimulated the James Cook University medical school, the one rural success I alluded to earlier.</p><p>One of the myriad failed policies to address the so-called rural workforce shortage was expanded intakes into metropolitan medical schools. Why one thought that would work is a puzzle. A Sydney university study has demonstrated that rural students who entered that University had their initial rural orientation drilled out of them over the course of their enrolment.<span><sup>2</sup></span></p><p>The structures and funding of rural practice hinders development of successful workforce models. The doctors who work in the private general practice in the town are the same doctors who work in the small rural hospital in the same town, yet there are differences in who pays them and how. Legal barriers, and distrust between Commonwealth and state governments, conspire against integrated employment models. There are positive signs this might be ending,<span><sup>3</sup></span> and we may yet get more sensible arrangements, hopefully not after the last rural doctor leaves, turning the lights out after themselves on the way out.</p><p>The arguments here about the medical profession apply in some degree to other health professionals as well, including nursing. Nursing and allied health professionals are hard to recruit into rural settings and again, more needs to be done to make these programs attractive to rural students, many of whom need an income while studying. More use needs to be made of ‘earn and learn’ models of education, building on already existing experiences,<span><sup>4</sup></span> albeit perhaps with a bomb under them to be a bit more innovative.</p><p>The issue of new workforce models in rural towns, including the so-called single employer model, brings us back to the bigger issue of the role of rural hospitals. In my view, some of our tendency to go off on the wrong track in terms of policy is a failure to conceptualise what small rural hospitals are and what they do. When we think of small rural hospitals, we often think of them as a small version of a metro hospital, but I will argue they are not. The ‘continuum theory’, that the difference between small rurals and their metropolitan cousins is one of degree, is fallacious and leads one down a dangerous path, including to merger mania. Just as Peter Mac, a highly specialised Hospital, is totally different from its neighbour across the road the Royal Melbourne, and both are different from Frankston, and Shepparton, the small rural hospital is as different in kind from all these others as the large general from the specialist.</p><p>When we think about rural hospital planning—especially in states which are better at it than Victoria—we focus on role delineation for particular services, and we immediately think of hierarchies—Level 6 hospitals can do way more than Level 1 hospitals in a given specialty. The aspiration is often to try to move further up the hierarchy, consistent with the privileging of specialism over generalism in health care. The role of a hospital is mostly then cast in terms of these clinical specialties in the role delineation taxonomy. I love this approach and have done for quite some time,<span><sup>5</sup></span> and helped develop the Queensland framework. But it relies on this continuum hypothesis—the small hospital is just a Lilliputian version of the big one—smaller in size and narrower in scope.</p><p>When I led the development of activity-based funding in Victoria, the first thing we had to do was work out what hospitals did—what were the distinct products of hospitals and then work out how to describe and pay for them. What we did back then has stood the test of time. We talked about acute inpatients, outpatients, emergency department, etc. Aged care was also identified as a totally different product.</p><p>But what I now realise is that my conceptualisation was incomplete, and this has big implications for small rural hospitals. Unlike their bigger cousins, small rural hospitals have what I would describe as a <i>community development</i> function or product. It is pretty obvious when you look around good rural hospitals. The results can manifest in a host of ways: a good local hospital CEO will ‘be out there in the community, building links and strengthening the community’,<span><sup>6</sup></span> they will mobilise resources for the town—seeking funding for better aged care support to keep people in the community, perhaps providing community health and age care services in the home, and creating group supports. In some places, the role has evolved to create community gardens. In the town of Yea, it has involved development of an early intervention program reaching into kindergarten and primary school children.</p><p>You don't see that in city hospitals, nor in larger regional hospitals. The community hospital also becomes a resource and gathering places in climate emergencies such as floods and fires, which are set to become more common,<span><sup>7</sup></span> with the hospital CEO taking on a broader community-wide leadership role in those increasingly frequent emergencies.</p><p>The small rural hospital—like community health services in Melbourne and regional cities—is the Spakfilla™ of our increasingly disconnected health care system, filling the gaps and making it work, especially for those at risk and excluded. This community development function of small rural hospitals addresses social and economic determinants of health, in a way quite different from the neglect of these factors in metropolitan hospitals. There is plenty of evidence that health in rural and regional Australia is worse than in metropolitan Australia, and the health of First Nations Australians contributes a lot to that difference,<span><sup>6</sup></span> and small rural hospitals, with their preventive focus, can help a lot in redressing the health gap. My argument here is that there is an important social benefit that rural hospitals provide that goes beyond the narrow clinical benefit to the wider social and economic determinants of health.</p><p>And that brings us to governance and management. If a merger takes away local leadership and deemphasises this community development role, the merger will undermine social capital and potentially accelerate the withering of smaller rural communities.</p><p>But here is the risk. The governance role is not only about community development: communities expect their local hospital to be appropriately safe, which means that one needs competent boards, adequately supported and prepared to call out problems where they see them. This is hard because is easy for the board to be captured by the local clinical staff—who are often their neighbours who they see at the local shops—and to not have the complete information, the knowledge or the political courage to act on problems when they see them. This is an underestimated governance challenge for small hospitals, and I don't have a simple solution. However, it does require external eyes to be appointed to boards as we recommended in our report on quality and safety in Victoria. The external eyes should complement locally resident board members who bring different insights. Boards also need information about what is happening, and a good Director of Medical Services, and it is acknowledged that these people are few and far between. It also involves listening to the cries in the wilderness when these external eyes call out issues.</p><p>None of this is to dismiss the critical clinical roles that small rural hospital play. First and foremost, they are there when something goes wrong. They are, of course, not a major trauma centre but they can stabilise and initiate treatment, providing information to families and carers, and to emergency services. Ideally paramedic services should be stationed adjacent to hospitals, with joint working, as we did in some parts of rural Alberta. The role of paramedics is increasingly recognised as being a valuable one outside the ambulance setting and governments should work to overcome the industrial and other barriers which prevent this, creating more interesting roles and serving communities better. Similarly, small rural hospitals have an important role in palliative care, facilitating people dying at home or at least closer to their families and other carers. Small rural hospitals could also potentially have a much greater role in providing rehabilitation care.</p><p>Small rural hospitals, in conjunction with universities and vocational education providers, should be more proactive in addressing workforce challenges, promoting ‘grow your own’ approaches. This might involve supporting local residents enter the health professions, including through building aspirations, negotiating accessible on-site programs,<span><sup>8</sup></span> and developing earn and learn models.<span><sup>9, 10</sup></span> The training and development function ought to become a more prominent one in small rural hospitals, and this may require new categories payments to reflect the aspiration building role and the earn and learn approach. The aspiration building role extends particularly to providing opportunities for First Nations Australians, recognising that hospitals need to be culturally safe for this to occur.</p><p>If mergers are to occur, the smaller hospitals should not be subsumed into clinical programs of the larger entities, but rather local management should be protected, and the internal organisational structure should recognise their distinctly different role from the larger regional hospitals. This is the approach we adopted in Alberta when I was there.</p><p>We are on the brink of a technological revolution, which potentially increases the role of small rural hospitals and leads to their doing more than they do now. Yet we are ignoring that. Improved telehealth capabilities will enable people wherever they are to get advice on whether they should see a doctor now or in 6 h' time. Telehealth tools will enable clinical staff to ‘phone a friend’ seeking advice and help from more experienced or more specialised clinicians elsewhere. Artificial intelligence will revolutionise the diagnostic decision-making process. And it is much easier for AI to be available in a small rural town than it is for a highly trained specialist. Properly implemented, AI will also potentially increase what can be done locally.</p><p>But these new benefits will only be available if the right infrastructure is already there, overseen by the right governance. So, one has to think very carefully about the role and place of rural hospitals in 2024 and beyond. We need to think carefully about what they do now, and think broadly about that, what they do well and what they might do better in the future. And yes, this may still involve mergers, albeit like with like, and definitely voluntary.</p><p>Small rural hospitals are not just nano versions of the citadels in Melbourne, and they have a distinct and very different role, a role which extends beyond what we traditionally think of as <i>health care</i>, into the <i>health</i> of the community. It is this that must be built on as we work to improve rural health care and its governance.</p>","PeriodicalId":55421,"journal":{"name":"Australian Journal of Rural Health","volume":"32 6","pages":"1091-1094"},"PeriodicalIF":1.9000,"publicationDate":"2024-12-13","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/ajr.13205","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Australian Journal of Rural Health","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ajr.13205","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"NURSING","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

I'm not a rural person. I was born in Sydney; I now live in Melbourne. I've never lived in a small town, so I feel like somewhat of a fraud talking about the future of small rural hospitals. In the past, my attitude towards rural health care could be characterised as benign neglect, with an important exception I'll come to. For some of my career, I was responsible for budgets and budget savings in particular. My view then was that the big money is in the big hospitals, so I didn't look to rural closures or amalgamations to solve budget deficits. This is still my view.

Almost a decade ago, I was asked to lead a review of quality and safety in Victorian hospitals following tragic outcomes at Bacchus Marsh Hospital associated with poor clinical governance. As part of that review, I was forced to think more carefully about the trade-offs involved in rural health provision, between access, the workforce and clinical governance challenges, and the broader role of hospitals that I will talk about later.

Victoria has seen a flurry of amalgamation talk over the last year with on again—off again—on again oscillations favouring mergers either forced or voluntary. There are good reasons to argue for amalgamations—particularly those that are voluntary—as they can create improvements for both staff and communities in rural Victoria as our Grampians Health case study shows.1

Money is not the only reason to look to amalgamations, care quality is another and my observation—based on anecdote only I'm afraid—is that there are significant weaknesses in clinical governance in some small hospitals that need to be addressed. Part-time, advisory medical administrative oversight, especially without clear and transparent lines of accountability, has been shown to be a recipe for disaster (Medical Board of Australia v Dr. Gruner (Review and Regulation) (2022) VCAT 1116; Medical Board of Australia v Dr. Gruner (Review and Regulation) (2023) VCAT 273). Medical practitioners in some cases are able to hold small communities and their hospitals to ransom.

But I think the obsession with structural solutions is not the place to start. The critical issue to address is workforce, and not enough is being done about this. Secondly, and what I want to focus most of this talk on, is thinking through what a small rural hospital is, as we move into the second quarter of this century. The failure to fully understand the role that small hospitals play contributes to muddled policy thinking and poor policy prescriptions.

But first workforce. Australia has a plethora of rural workforce incentives, policies and strategies. They are interacting, overlapping, expensive and ineffective. If you add them all up, you might even have one program for every rural doctor! Unfortunately, this mish mash seems to me to be developed by bureaucrats and politicians who look for solutions in the wrong place.

If we conceptualise the problem as too many well-paid specialists concentrated in the more affluent areas of east coast cities, the solution may take a different form. We might then have smaller intakes into metropolitan medical schools, offset by increased intakes into rural schools. The evidence is that students who grow up rurally, go to school rurally and go to university rurally tend to practice rurally. What a shock. So, I am proud that when I was a Canberra bureaucrat, I stimulated the James Cook University medical school, the one rural success I alluded to earlier.

One of the myriad failed policies to address the so-called rural workforce shortage was expanded intakes into metropolitan medical schools. Why one thought that would work is a puzzle. A Sydney university study has demonstrated that rural students who entered that University had their initial rural orientation drilled out of them over the course of their enrolment.2

The structures and funding of rural practice hinders development of successful workforce models. The doctors who work in the private general practice in the town are the same doctors who work in the small rural hospital in the same town, yet there are differences in who pays them and how. Legal barriers, and distrust between Commonwealth and state governments, conspire against integrated employment models. There are positive signs this might be ending,3 and we may yet get more sensible arrangements, hopefully not after the last rural doctor leaves, turning the lights out after themselves on the way out.

The arguments here about the medical profession apply in some degree to other health professionals as well, including nursing. Nursing and allied health professionals are hard to recruit into rural settings and again, more needs to be done to make these programs attractive to rural students, many of whom need an income while studying. More use needs to be made of ‘earn and learn’ models of education, building on already existing experiences,4 albeit perhaps with a bomb under them to be a bit more innovative.

The issue of new workforce models in rural towns, including the so-called single employer model, brings us back to the bigger issue of the role of rural hospitals. In my view, some of our tendency to go off on the wrong track in terms of policy is a failure to conceptualise what small rural hospitals are and what they do. When we think of small rural hospitals, we often think of them as a small version of a metro hospital, but I will argue they are not. The ‘continuum theory’, that the difference between small rurals and their metropolitan cousins is one of degree, is fallacious and leads one down a dangerous path, including to merger mania. Just as Peter Mac, a highly specialised Hospital, is totally different from its neighbour across the road the Royal Melbourne, and both are different from Frankston, and Shepparton, the small rural hospital is as different in kind from all these others as the large general from the specialist.

When we think about rural hospital planning—especially in states which are better at it than Victoria—we focus on role delineation for particular services, and we immediately think of hierarchies—Level 6 hospitals can do way more than Level 1 hospitals in a given specialty. The aspiration is often to try to move further up the hierarchy, consistent with the privileging of specialism over generalism in health care. The role of a hospital is mostly then cast in terms of these clinical specialties in the role delineation taxonomy. I love this approach and have done for quite some time,5 and helped develop the Queensland framework. But it relies on this continuum hypothesis—the small hospital is just a Lilliputian version of the big one—smaller in size and narrower in scope.

When I led the development of activity-based funding in Victoria, the first thing we had to do was work out what hospitals did—what were the distinct products of hospitals and then work out how to describe and pay for them. What we did back then has stood the test of time. We talked about acute inpatients, outpatients, emergency department, etc. Aged care was also identified as a totally different product.

But what I now realise is that my conceptualisation was incomplete, and this has big implications for small rural hospitals. Unlike their bigger cousins, small rural hospitals have what I would describe as a community development function or product. It is pretty obvious when you look around good rural hospitals. The results can manifest in a host of ways: a good local hospital CEO will ‘be out there in the community, building links and strengthening the community’,6 they will mobilise resources for the town—seeking funding for better aged care support to keep people in the community, perhaps providing community health and age care services in the home, and creating group supports. In some places, the role has evolved to create community gardens. In the town of Yea, it has involved development of an early intervention program reaching into kindergarten and primary school children.

You don't see that in city hospitals, nor in larger regional hospitals. The community hospital also becomes a resource and gathering places in climate emergencies such as floods and fires, which are set to become more common,7 with the hospital CEO taking on a broader community-wide leadership role in those increasingly frequent emergencies.

The small rural hospital—like community health services in Melbourne and regional cities—is the Spakfilla™ of our increasingly disconnected health care system, filling the gaps and making it work, especially for those at risk and excluded. This community development function of small rural hospitals addresses social and economic determinants of health, in a way quite different from the neglect of these factors in metropolitan hospitals. There is plenty of evidence that health in rural and regional Australia is worse than in metropolitan Australia, and the health of First Nations Australians contributes a lot to that difference,6 and small rural hospitals, with their preventive focus, can help a lot in redressing the health gap. My argument here is that there is an important social benefit that rural hospitals provide that goes beyond the narrow clinical benefit to the wider social and economic determinants of health.

And that brings us to governance and management. If a merger takes away local leadership and deemphasises this community development role, the merger will undermine social capital and potentially accelerate the withering of smaller rural communities.

But here is the risk. The governance role is not only about community development: communities expect their local hospital to be appropriately safe, which means that one needs competent boards, adequately supported and prepared to call out problems where they see them. This is hard because is easy for the board to be captured by the local clinical staff—who are often their neighbours who they see at the local shops—and to not have the complete information, the knowledge or the political courage to act on problems when they see them. This is an underestimated governance challenge for small hospitals, and I don't have a simple solution. However, it does require external eyes to be appointed to boards as we recommended in our report on quality and safety in Victoria. The external eyes should complement locally resident board members who bring different insights. Boards also need information about what is happening, and a good Director of Medical Services, and it is acknowledged that these people are few and far between. It also involves listening to the cries in the wilderness when these external eyes call out issues.

None of this is to dismiss the critical clinical roles that small rural hospital play. First and foremost, they are there when something goes wrong. They are, of course, not a major trauma centre but they can stabilise and initiate treatment, providing information to families and carers, and to emergency services. Ideally paramedic services should be stationed adjacent to hospitals, with joint working, as we did in some parts of rural Alberta. The role of paramedics is increasingly recognised as being a valuable one outside the ambulance setting and governments should work to overcome the industrial and other barriers which prevent this, creating more interesting roles and serving communities better. Similarly, small rural hospitals have an important role in palliative care, facilitating people dying at home or at least closer to their families and other carers. Small rural hospitals could also potentially have a much greater role in providing rehabilitation care.

Small rural hospitals, in conjunction with universities and vocational education providers, should be more proactive in addressing workforce challenges, promoting ‘grow your own’ approaches. This might involve supporting local residents enter the health professions, including through building aspirations, negotiating accessible on-site programs,8 and developing earn and learn models.9, 10 The training and development function ought to become a more prominent one in small rural hospitals, and this may require new categories payments to reflect the aspiration building role and the earn and learn approach. The aspiration building role extends particularly to providing opportunities for First Nations Australians, recognising that hospitals need to be culturally safe for this to occur.

If mergers are to occur, the smaller hospitals should not be subsumed into clinical programs of the larger entities, but rather local management should be protected, and the internal organisational structure should recognise their distinctly different role from the larger regional hospitals. This is the approach we adopted in Alberta when I was there.

We are on the brink of a technological revolution, which potentially increases the role of small rural hospitals and leads to their doing more than they do now. Yet we are ignoring that. Improved telehealth capabilities will enable people wherever they are to get advice on whether they should see a doctor now or in 6 h' time. Telehealth tools will enable clinical staff to ‘phone a friend’ seeking advice and help from more experienced or more specialised clinicians elsewhere. Artificial intelligence will revolutionise the diagnostic decision-making process. And it is much easier for AI to be available in a small rural town than it is for a highly trained specialist. Properly implemented, AI will also potentially increase what can be done locally.

But these new benefits will only be available if the right infrastructure is already there, overseen by the right governance. So, one has to think very carefully about the role and place of rural hospitals in 2024 and beyond. We need to think carefully about what they do now, and think broadly about that, what they do well and what they might do better in the future. And yes, this may still involve mergers, albeit like with like, and definitely voluntary.

Small rural hospitals are not just nano versions of the citadels in Melbourne, and they have a distinct and very different role, a role which extends beyond what we traditionally think of as health care, into the health of the community. It is this that must be built on as we work to improve rural health care and its governance.

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促进小型农村医院的未来。
我不是农村人。我出生在悉尼;我现在住在墨尔本。我从来没有在小城镇生活过,所以我觉得谈论小型农村医院的未来有点像个骗子。在过去,我对农村卫生保健的态度可以被描述为善意的忽视,我将谈到一个重要的例外。在我的职业生涯中,我主要负责预算和预算节约。我当时的观点是,大医院赚大钱,所以我没有指望关闭农村医院或通过合并来解决预算赤字。这仍然是我的观点。大约十年前,在巴克斯马什医院(Bacchus Marsh Hospital)因临床管理不善导致悲惨后果之后,我被要求领导对维多利亚州医院的质量和安全进行审查。作为审查的一部分,我被迫更仔细地思考农村卫生服务所涉及的权衡取舍,在获取、劳动力和临床治理挑战之间的权衡取舍,以及医院更广泛的作用,我将在后面讨论。在过去的一年里,维多利亚州出现了一连串的合并谈判,断断续续的振荡有利于强制或自愿的合并。我们有充分的理由支持合并,尤其是那些自愿的合并,因为合并可以改善维多利亚农村地区的员工和社区,正如我们的格兰平健康案例研究所显示的那样。金钱不是寻求合并的唯一原因,护理质量是另一个原因,我的观察(我恐怕只是基于轶事)是,一些小医院在临床管理方面存在明显的弱点,需要解决。非全时的咨询式医疗行政监督,特别是缺乏明确和透明的问责制,已被证明是造成灾难的原因(澳大利亚医学委员会诉格鲁纳博士(审查和监管)(2022年)VCAT 1116;澳大利亚医学委员会诉Gruner博士(审查和管理)(2023年)VCAT 273)。在某些情况下,医生能够向小社区及其医院勒索赎金。但我认为对结构性解决方案的痴迷并不是开始的地方。需要解决的关键问题是劳动力,而在这方面做得还不够。其次,也是我今天演讲的重点,是在我们进入本世纪后25年的时候,思考一下小型农村医院是什么。未能充分认识小医院的作用,导致政策思路混乱,政策处方不佳。首先是劳动力。澳大利亚有大量的农村劳动力激励措施、政策和战略。它们相互作用、重叠、昂贵且无效。如果你把它们全部加起来,你甚至可以为每个农村医生提供一个项目!不幸的是,在我看来,这种杂烩似乎是由官僚和政客们开发的,他们在错误的地方寻找解决方案。如果我们把这个问题理解为太多高薪专家集中在东部沿海城市较富裕的地区,那么解决方案可能会以不同的形式出现。这样一来,大城市医学院的入学人数可能会减少,而农村学校的入学人数则会增加。有证据表明,在农村长大、在农村上学、在农村上大学的学生倾向于在农村实践。真是令人震惊。因此,我感到自豪的是,当我还是堪培拉的一名官员时,我推动了詹姆斯库克大学医学院,这是我前面提到的一项农村成功。为了解决所谓的农村劳动力短缺问题,无数失败的政策之一就是扩大大城市医学院的招生规模。为什么有人会认为这是一个谜。悉尼大学的一项研究表明,进入该大学的农村学生在入学过程中就已经逐渐丧失了最初的农村倾向。农村实践的结构和资金阻碍了成功劳动力模式的发展。在镇上的私人全科诊所工作的医生和在镇上的小乡村医院工作的医生是同一个人,但在谁付钱和如何付钱方面存在差异。法律障碍,以及联邦政府和州政府之间的不信任,共同阻碍了综合就业模式。有积极的迹象表明,这种情况可能会结束,我们可能会得到更明智的安排,希望不是在最后一个乡村医生离开后,他们在离开后关灯。这里关于医学职业的争论在某种程度上也适用于其他卫生专业人员,包括护理人员。护理和相关卫生专业人员很难在农村地区招聘到,因此,需要做更多的工作来使这些项目对农村学生有吸引力,因为他们中的许多人在学习期间需要收入。在现有经验的基础上,我们需要更多地利用“挣和学”的教育模式,4尽管可能会在模式下加一个炸弹,以更具创新性。 农村城镇新劳动力模式的问题,包括所谓的单一雇主模式,把我们带回到更大的问题,即农村医院的作用。在我看来,我们在政策方面偏离错误轨道的一些倾向,是由于未能对小型农村医院是什么以及它们做什么进行概念化。当我们想到小型农村医院时,我们通常认为它们是小型的地铁医院,但我认为它们不是。“连续统一体理论”认为,小农村和大城市之间的差异只是程度上的差异,这种理论是错误的,并将人们引向一条危险的道路,包括合并狂热。彼得·麦克是一家高度专业化的医院,它与街对面的皇家墨尔本医院完全不同,两者又与弗兰克斯顿和谢泼顿不同,同样,小乡村医院与其他医院在性质上的不同,就像大将军与专科医生的不同一样。当我们考虑农村医院的规划时——特别是在比维多利亚州做得更好的州——我们关注的是特定服务的角色描述,我们立即想到等级制度——在特定的专业领域,6级医院比1级医院做得更多。人们的愿望往往是试图进一步提升等级,这与医疗保健中专科优先于全科的特权是一致的。在角色划分分类中,医院的角色大多是根据这些临床专科来确定的。我喜欢这种方法,并且已经这样做了很长一段时间,5并帮助开发了昆士兰框架。但它依赖于连续性假设——小医院只是大医院的小人版——规模更小,范围更窄。当我在维多利亚州领导活动基金的发展时,我们要做的第一件事就是弄清楚医院做什么——医院的独特产品是什么,然后弄清楚如何描述和支付这些产品。我们当时的所作所为经受住了时间的考验。我们讨论了急性住院病人、门诊病人、急诊科病人等。老年护理也被认为是一种完全不同的产品。但我现在意识到,我的概念是不完整的,这对小型农村医院有很大的影响。与大医院不同的是,小型农村医院具有我所说的社区发展功能或产品。当你环顾一下好的农村医院时,这是很明显的。结果可以体现在许多方面:一个好的当地医院的首席执行官将“在社区中,建立联系并加强社区”,6他们将为城镇调动资源——寻求更好的老年护理支持资金,以使人们留在社区,也许在家里提供社区健康和老年护理服务,并创造团体支持。在一些地方,这个角色已经演变为创建社区花园。在耶尔镇,它涉及到幼儿园和小学儿童的早期干预计划的发展。你不会在城市医院看到这种情况,也不会在较大的地区医院看到。社区医院也成为气候紧急情况(如洪水和火灾)的资源和聚集地,这些紧急情况将变得越来越常见,7医院首席执行官在这些日益频繁的紧急情况中承担更广泛的社区领导角色。小型农村医院——类似于墨尔本和地区城市的社区卫生服务——是我们日益脱节的卫生保健系统的“救火”,填补了空白,使其发挥作用,特别是对那些处于危险和被排除在外的人。小型农村医院的这种社区发展功能处理健康的社会和经济决定因素,其方式与大城市医院对这些因素的忽视完全不同。有大量证据表明,澳大利亚农村和地区的健康状况比澳大利亚大城市的差,土著澳大利亚人的健康状况在很大程度上造成了这种差异6,小型农村医院以预防为重点,可以在很大程度上帮助弥补健康差距。我在这里的论点是,农村医院提供了一种重要的社会效益,它超越了狭隘的临床效益,涉及到健康的更广泛的社会和经济决定因素。这就引出了治理和管理。如果合并剥夺了地方领导权,弱化了社区发展的作用,合并将破坏社会资本,并可能加速较小的农村社区的消亡。但风险就在这里。治理的作用不仅与社区发展有关:社区期望他们的当地医院适当安全,这意味着需要有能力的董事会,得到充分支持并做好准备,以便在看到问题时提出问题。 这是困难的,因为董事会很容易被当地的临床工作人员俘获——这些人通常是他们在当地商店看到的邻居——当他们看到问题时,他们没有完整的信息、知识或政治勇气来采取行动。对于小医院来说,这是一个被低估的治理挑战,我没有一个简单的解决方案。然而,正如我们在维多利亚州质量和安全报告中建议的那样,确实需要任命外部人士进入董事会。外部的眼光应该与带来不同见解的当地常驻董事会成员相辅相成。董事会还需要了解正在发生的事情,需要一位优秀的医疗服务总监,而众所周知,这样的人很少,而且相隔甚远。它还包括倾听荒野中的呼喊,当这些外部的眼睛呼唤问题时。这并不是要忽视小型农村医院在临床中发挥的关键作用。首先,当事情出错时,他们就在那里。当然,他们不是一个主要的创伤中心,但他们可以稳定和开始治疗,向家庭和护理人员以及紧急服务提供信息。理想情况下,护理人员应该驻扎在医院附近,共同工作,就像我们在阿尔伯塔省农村的一些地区所做的那样。护理人员的角色越来越被认为是救护车设置之外的一个有价值的角色,政府应该努力克服阻碍这一点的工业和其他障碍,创造更多有趣的角色,更好地为社区服务。同样,小型农村医院在姑息治疗方面发挥着重要作用,为在家或至少离家人和其他照顾者更近的人提供便利。小型农村医院也可能在提供康复护理方面发挥更大的作用。小型农村医院应与大学和职业教育机构合作,更积极主动地应对劳动力挑战,推广“自己成长”的方法。这可能涉及支持当地居民进入卫生专业,包括通过建立愿望,谈判无障碍的现场方案,8和制定收入和学习模式。9,10培训和发展职能应在小型农村医院中更加突出,这可能需要新的支付类别,以反映培养愿望的作用和既赚又学的办法。建立愿望的作用特别延伸到为第一民族澳大利亚人提供机会,认识到医院需要在文化上安全才能实现这一点。如果合并发生,较小的医院不应该被纳入较大实体的临床项目,而是应该保护地方管理,内部组织结构应该承认它们与较大的区域医院的明显不同的作用。这是我在艾伯塔省时我们采用的方法。我们正处于一场技术革命的边缘,这可能会增加小型农村医院的作用,并导致它们比现在做得更多。然而,我们却忽视了这一点。改进的远程医疗功能将使人们无论身在何处都能得到关于是否应该现在看医生还是在6小时后看医生的建议。远程医疗工具将使临床工作人员能够“打电话给朋友”,从其他地方更有经验或更专业的临床医生那里寻求建议和帮助。人工智能将彻底改变诊断决策过程。人工智能在农村小镇的应用要比训练有素的专家容易得多。如果实施得当,人工智能也将潜在地增加当地可以做的事情。但是,这些新的好处只有在合适的基础设施已经存在,并由合适的治理机构监督的情况下才能实现。因此,人们必须非常仔细地思考农村医院在2024年及以后的角色和地位。我们需要仔细思考他们现在在做什么,并从更广泛的角度思考,他们在哪些方面做得很好,以及他们未来可能在哪些方面做得更好。是的,这可能仍然涉及合并,尽管是同类合并,而且绝对是自愿的。小型农村医院不仅仅是墨尔本的纳米版本,他们有一个独特的,非常不同的角色,这个角色超越了我们传统上认为的医疗保健,进入了社区的健康。在我们努力改善农村卫生保健及其治理的过程中,必须以此为基础。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Australian Journal of Rural Health
Australian Journal of Rural Health 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
16.70%
发文量
122
审稿时长
12 months
期刊介绍: The Australian Journal of Rural Health publishes articles in the field of rural health. It facilitates the formation of interdisciplinary networks, so that rural health professionals can form a cohesive group and work together for the advancement of rural practice, in all health disciplines. The Journal aims to establish a national and international reputation for the quality of its scholarly discourse and its value to rural health professionals. All articles, unless otherwise identified, are peer reviewed by at least two researchers expert in the field of the submitted paper.
期刊最新文献
Challenges of Dementia Care in a Regional Australian Hospital: Exploring Interventions to Minimise Length of Stay for Dementia Patients. Royal Far West's Allied Health Telehealth Services for Children Post-Bushfires. Rural nursing and allied health placements during the latter stage of the COVID-19 public health emergency: A national study. The Utility of a Digital Glucose-Like Peptide-1 Receptor Agonist-Supported Weight-Loss Service in Regional Australia: A Qualitative Analysis of Interviews With Current Patients of the Eucalyptus Program. Sleep patterns among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples and non-Indigenous Australians: A South Australian descriptive exploratory study.
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