Written Answers - Primary Care

Tuesday, 17 May 2011

Dáil Éireann Debate
Vol. 732 No. 3

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 475.  Deputy Billy Kelleher Information on Billy Kelleher Zoom on Billy Kelleher  asked the Minister for Health and Children Information on Dr James Reilly Zoom on Dr James Reilly  if he will be taking action to recover funds allocated to support primary care teams which he believes have been improperly counted as such. [11307/11]

 491.  Deputy John Deasy Information on John Deasy Zoom on John Deasy  asked the Minister for Health and Children Information on Dr James Reilly Zoom on Dr James Reilly  the criteria laid down for the provision of primary care units; the additional benefits and services to the public envisaged by the provision of same; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [11432/11]

Minister of State at the Department of Health and Children (Deputy Róisín Shortall): Information on Róisín Shortall Zoom on Róisín Shortall I propose to take Questions Nos. 475 and 491 together.

The development of Primary Care teams and services is a priority under the Programme for Government. The aim is to provide up to 95% of health and social care in local communities and this will be achieved by increasing activity in the primary care setting and redirecting health services away from acute hospitals to the community.

The Health Service Executive (HSE) has responsibility for the development of Primary Care Centres in line with the Primary Care Strategy. It is the HSE’s plan that the majority of Primary Care Centres will be provided by the private sector through leasing agreements.

In this context, the Executive has developed a generic design model for Primary Care Centres, with accommodation for up to three Primary Care Teams per centre. It is the HSE’s intention to deliver up to 200 Primary Care Centres using this leasing strategy. The HSE states that, to date, 32 Primary Care Centres are complete and in operation. 16 of these have opened under the leasing arrangement, accommodating 23 Primary Care Teams. Primary Care Centres in disadvantaged urban and small rural towns / isolated areas will continue to be funded from the Exchequer.

In accordance with the Primary Care Strategy, modern, well-equipped primary care centres will be central to the effective functioning of primary care teams. The centres will allow multi-disciplinary services, provided by GPs, nurses, physiotherapists, occupational therapists and others, to be made available on a single site, providing a single point of access for the user and will encourage closer co-ordination between providers. The new centres will greatly assist in the provision of modern services, in particular the provision of chronic disease management by multi-disciplinary teams.

The criteria for the location of PCTs include population size; availability of GPs in local areas; existing General Medical Services (GMS) patterns and the location of existing and proposed Primary Care Centres.

There are significant variations across PCTs in terms of the number of clinical team meetings held, the number of patients discussed and the number of patient care plans agreed. It is a key priority for this Government that all PCTs are fully functional and the HSE has been asked to make significant progress on this issue over the next 12 months. As a first step, the HSE has been asked to identify precisely how many teams are currently fully operational.


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