General practitioner beds in Finland--lessons for the UK?
- 1 January 1987
- journal article
- Vol. 37 (294) , 28-30
Abstract
The Finnish Primary Health Care Act of 1972 aimed to provide comprehensive health care to the population. One consequence was an increase in the number of beds for the use of general practitioners, so that there are now 2.2 general practitioner beds per thousand population. Use of these beds varies with the location of the health station in which they are situated, but in rural areas approximates to that of general practitioner hospitals in the United Kingdom. Despite integration of general practitioner beds into overall planning, some potential benefits of these facilities have not been realized. For the UK, with traditions of personal general practice and continuity of care, the Finnish system offers one model of community care which may have medical and economic advantages.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Community hospitals in Oxfordshire: their effect on the use of specialist inpatient services.Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 1986
- General practitioner hospitals: coming or going?BMJ, 1984
- The place of general practitioner hospitals in the organization of hospital services.1982
- Acute medicine in a general practitioner hospital.1982
- Contribution of general practitioner hospitals in England and Wales.BMJ, 1978
- Contribution of a General-practitioner HospitalBMJ, 1971