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A survey of PC stakeholders (clinicians, researchers, and policy-makers) from 111 countries revealed many of the challenges encountered when facing the pandemic without a coordinated effort between PC and PH functions. Participants’ responses to open-ended questions underscored how each of the key actions could have been strengthened in their country and are potential factors to why a strong PC system may not have contributed to reduced mortality.
Among numerous other statistics, despite spending approximately twice what comparative countries spend on healthcare, the US has highest rates of preventable deaths. Even wealthy Americans are more likely to, for example, die during childbirth, from cancer and from heart attacks than those in 12 comparative countries. This is substantially due to the fact primary care in the US, as the National Academy of Medicine report states in its opening, is “slowly dying.” The report further notes despite the fact primary care’s value is beyond dispute, approximately 25% of Americans do not have a primary care physician and 80 million Americans live, per HRSA, in primary care health professions shortage areas. In turn, this is largely due to the fact only 5% of healthcare spending goes to primary care despite such visits accounting for 40% of all medical office visits. Translation: primary care physicians are substantially undercompensated that contributes to a growing shortage of primary care clinicians.
Telemedicine applications have been utilized for decades, most commonly in specific areas of medicine (e.g., dermatology, pathology, radiology) and in specific contexts, (e.g., rural or other under-resourced areas).