Feasibility of implementing chronic care model in the malaysian public primary care setting

Introduction: Non-communicable diseases (NCD) is a global health threat. the Chronic Care Model (CCM) was proven effective in improving NCD management and outcomes in developed countries. Evidence from developing countries including Malaysia is limited and feasibility of CCM implementation has not b...

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Published in:Medical Journal of Malaysia
Main Author: Ariffin F.; Ramli A.S.; Daud M.H.; Haniff J.; Abdul-Razak S.; Selvarajah S.; Lee V.; Tong S.F.; Bujang M.A.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Malaysian Medical Association 2017
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85018688670&partnerID=40&md5=ff847c2bd551cec94af393d30cd00e40
id 2-s2.0-85018688670
spelling 2-s2.0-85018688670
Ariffin F.; Ramli A.S.; Daud M.H.; Haniff J.; Abdul-Razak S.; Selvarajah S.; Lee V.; Tong S.F.; Bujang M.A.
Feasibility of implementing chronic care model in the malaysian public primary care setting
2017
Medical Journal of Malaysia
72
2

https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85018688670&partnerID=40&md5=ff847c2bd551cec94af393d30cd00e40
Introduction: Non-communicable diseases (NCD) is a global health threat. the Chronic Care Model (CCM) was proven effective in improving NCD management and outcomes in developed countries. Evidence from developing countries including Malaysia is limited and feasibility of CCM implementation has not been assessed. this study intends to assess the feasibility of public primary health care clinics (PHC) in providing care according to the CCM. Methodology: A cross-sectional survey was conducted to assess the public PHC ability to implement the components of CCM. All public PHC with Family Medicine Specialist in Selangor and Kuala Lumpur were invited to participate. A site feasibility questionnaire was distributed to collect site investigator and clinic information as well as delivery of care for diabetes and hypertension. results: there were a total of 34 public PHC invited to participate with a response rate of 100%. there were 20 urban and 14 suburban clinics. the average number of patients seen per day ranged between 250-1000 patients. the clinic has a good mix of multidisciplinary team members. All clinics had a diabetic registry and 73.5% had a hypertensive registry. 23.5% had a dedicated diabetes and 26.5% had a dedicated hypertension clinic with most clinic implementing integrated care of acute and NCD cases. Discussion: the implementation of the essential components of CCM is feasible in public PHCs, despite various constraints. Although variations in delivery of care exists, majority of the clinics have adequate staff that were willing to be trained and are committed to improving patient care. © 2017, Malaysian Medical Association. All rights reserved.
Malaysian Medical Association
3005283
English
Article

author Ariffin F.; Ramli A.S.; Daud M.H.; Haniff J.; Abdul-Razak S.; Selvarajah S.; Lee V.; Tong S.F.; Bujang M.A.
spellingShingle Ariffin F.; Ramli A.S.; Daud M.H.; Haniff J.; Abdul-Razak S.; Selvarajah S.; Lee V.; Tong S.F.; Bujang M.A.
Feasibility of implementing chronic care model in the malaysian public primary care setting
author_facet Ariffin F.; Ramli A.S.; Daud M.H.; Haniff J.; Abdul-Razak S.; Selvarajah S.; Lee V.; Tong S.F.; Bujang M.A.
author_sort Ariffin F.; Ramli A.S.; Daud M.H.; Haniff J.; Abdul-Razak S.; Selvarajah S.; Lee V.; Tong S.F.; Bujang M.A.
title Feasibility of implementing chronic care model in the malaysian public primary care setting
title_short Feasibility of implementing chronic care model in the malaysian public primary care setting
title_full Feasibility of implementing chronic care model in the malaysian public primary care setting
title_fullStr Feasibility of implementing chronic care model in the malaysian public primary care setting
title_full_unstemmed Feasibility of implementing chronic care model in the malaysian public primary care setting
title_sort Feasibility of implementing chronic care model in the malaysian public primary care setting
publishDate 2017
container_title Medical Journal of Malaysia
container_volume 72
container_issue 2
doi_str_mv
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85018688670&partnerID=40&md5=ff847c2bd551cec94af393d30cd00e40
description Introduction: Non-communicable diseases (NCD) is a global health threat. the Chronic Care Model (CCM) was proven effective in improving NCD management and outcomes in developed countries. Evidence from developing countries including Malaysia is limited and feasibility of CCM implementation has not been assessed. this study intends to assess the feasibility of public primary health care clinics (PHC) in providing care according to the CCM. Methodology: A cross-sectional survey was conducted to assess the public PHC ability to implement the components of CCM. All public PHC with Family Medicine Specialist in Selangor and Kuala Lumpur were invited to participate. A site feasibility questionnaire was distributed to collect site investigator and clinic information as well as delivery of care for diabetes and hypertension. results: there were a total of 34 public PHC invited to participate with a response rate of 100%. there were 20 urban and 14 suburban clinics. the average number of patients seen per day ranged between 250-1000 patients. the clinic has a good mix of multidisciplinary team members. All clinics had a diabetic registry and 73.5% had a hypertensive registry. 23.5% had a dedicated diabetes and 26.5% had a dedicated hypertension clinic with most clinic implementing integrated care of acute and NCD cases. Discussion: the implementation of the essential components of CCM is feasible in public PHCs, despite various constraints. Although variations in delivery of care exists, majority of the clinics have adequate staff that were willing to be trained and are committed to improving patient care. © 2017, Malaysian Medical Association. All rights reserved.
publisher Malaysian Medical Association
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