Abstract

Effective and integrated primary health care services are seen world wide as the lynch pin of an equitable,efficient and high quality health care. Health services dominated by specialist care suffer either fromuncontainable costs (USA with 14% of GDP) or poor quality care (Russia and other former members of theSoviet bloc). Ierachi et al. (2000) argue that Australia should take the retrograde step of endorsing a servicewhich aims to "provide rapid, high quality and continuously accessible unscheduled care, for conditions coveringthe full spectrum of acute illness and injury" (emphasis added). They aim to provide care "for conditions", notfor people. General practice provides care for people, not just diseases or injuries.

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