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Partnering for Health: Ulverston. Anticipatory Care Action Learning Project Final Site Report

report
posted on 2023-05-25, 19:51 authored by Susan Banks, Robin KrabbeRobin Krabbe, Miriam Vandenberg, Therese MurrayTherese Murray

Chronic illness is a major cause of ill-health and avoidable hospitalisations in Tasmania, and this burden is not equitably distributed. Chronic disease is linked with the social determinants of health: risk is reduced when people have reliable access to economic resources, secure and good quality housing, good diet, hygiene, health services, social networks and education. We need to reduce the risks for chronic illness and find better ways to manage existing conditions to keep people well. The Anticipatory Care (AC) Action Learning Project explored whether building a more effective local anticipatory care system could start to address this problem, in four Tasmanian sites. AC identifies who is at risk of developing an illness and aims to keep people well. Effective AC may reduce the use of expensive health and social services (Baker, Leak, Ritchie, Lee, & Fielding, 2012; Tapsfield et al., 2016).

This report documents the project’s aims, processes, activities, and findings for the Connecting Care (CC) site in the 7315 postcode area.

Funding

Department of Health (Tasmania)

History

Publication title

Anticipatory Care Project

Commissioning body

Patrick Street Clinic and the Tasmanian Government Department of Health

Pagination

178

Department/School

Deputy Vice Chancellor (Research)

Publisher

Patrick Street Clinic and the Tasmanian Government Department of Health

Place of publication

Tasmania

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Prevention of human diseases and conditions; Health system performance (incl. effectiveness of programs); Provision of health and support services not elsewhere classified