Abstract

BackgroundSince 2002 the Health Ministry of Québec (Canada) has been implementing a primary care organizational innovation called 'family medicine groups'. This is occurring in a political context in which the reorganization of primary care is considered necessary to improve health care system performance. More specifically, the purpose of this reform has been to overcome systemic deficiencies in terms of accessibility and continuity of care. This paper examines the first years of implementation of the family medicine group program, with a focus on the emergence of the organizational identity of one of the pilot groups located in the urban area of Montreal.MethodsAn in-depth longitudinal case study was conducted over two and a half years. Face to face individual interviews with key informants from the family medicine group under study were conducted over the research period considered. Data was gathered throuhg observations and documentary analysis. The data was analyzed using temporal bracketing and Fairclough's three-dimensional critical discourse analytical techniques.ResultsThree different phases were identified over the period under study. During the first phase, which corresponded to the official start-up of the family medicine group program, new resources and staff were only available at the end of the period, and no changes occurred in medical practices. Power struggles between physicians and nurses characterized the second phase, resulting in a very difficult integration of advanced nurse practitioners into the group. Indeed, the last phase was portrayed by initial collaborative practices associated with a sensegiving process prompted by a new family medicine group director.ConclusionsThe creation of a primary care team is a very challenging process that goes beyond the normative policy definitions of who is on the team or what the team has to do. To fulfil expectations of quality improvement through team-based care, health care professionals who are required to work together need shared time/space contexts to communicate; to overcome interprofessional and interpersonal conflicts; and to make sense of and define who they collectively are and what they do as a clinical team.

Highlights

  • Since 2002 the Health Ministry of Québec (Canada) has been implementing a primary care organizational innovation called ‘family medicine groups’

  • First phase: (October 2002 - October 2003) - Driven by the ideal model of primary health care delivery The first phase of our analysis encompasses the first year of family medicine groups’ (FMGs) implementation, from October 2002 to October 2003

  • The need for creating such a group of practice was exclusively sustained by the two physicians who championed the project in this FMG, one the director of the family medicine unit located at the hospital and the other a counsellor in public health and a clinician working in both the hospital and the private clinic

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Summary

Introduction

Since 2002 the Health Ministry of Québec (Canada) has been implementing a primary care organizational innovation called ‘family medicine groups’. This is occurring in a political context in which the reorganization of primary care is considered necessary to improve health care system performance. Health care organization and management in Canada falling under and involved the implementation of a primary medical practice innovation called ‘family medicine groups’ (FMGs). In the publicly funded Quebec health care system, the vast majority of primary medical care has been traditionally provided by practitioners working in private clinics or polyclinics and who are remunerated on a feefor-service basis. A particular characteristic of the Quebec health care system is that about 40% of all family physicians work at the secondary level of care [3,4]

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