Building Blocks for Maternity Care - Presentation
- Health Authority
-
Fraser
-
Interior
- Division
-
Burnaby Division of Family Practice
-
Kootenay Boundary Division of Family Practice
-
White Rock South Surrey Division of Family Practice
- Published Date
-
2018-04-17
- Link to File
-
/media/divresources/GPSC_Summit_2018_Maternity_Care_Breakout_Slides.pdf
- Description
-
"A presentation from the GPSC Summit 2018 on the several initiatives that are improving maternity care for providers and patients."
- Health Authority
-
Fraser
-
Interior
- Division
-
Burnaby Division of Family Practice
-
Kootenay Boundary Division of Family Practice
-
White Rock South Surrey Division of Family Practice
- Corporate Author
-
General Practice Services Committee
-
Burnaby Division of Family Practice
-
Kootenay Boundary Division of Family Practice
-
White Rock South Surrey Division of Family Practice
- Personal Author
-
Dr Shelley Ross
Nancy Falconer
Kim Williams
Dr Charlene Lui
Dr Marvin Lemke
Dr Jeanette Boyd
Dr Tahmeena Ali
Dr Karen Buhler
- Published Date
-
2018-04-17
- Topics
-
Maternity Care
-
Patient Medical Home
- Event
-
GPSC Summit 2018
- Workshop
-
Building Blocks for Maternity Care
- Resource Type
-
Presentation
- File Type
-
Pdf
- Link to File
-
/media/divresources/GPSC_Summit_2018_Maternity_Care_Breakout_Slides.pdf
- Description
-
A presentation from the GPSC Summit 2018 on the several initiatives that are improving maternity care for providers and patients.
Less detail
Burnaby Primary Care Networks Strategic Direction - Conceptual Diagram
Join Our Community - Burnaby BC
Introduction: The Burnaby Division of Family Practice
Preparing for your Medical Visit
The Complete Physical: Who Needs One? General Symptoms
Gastrointestinal Symptoms
Why Emotional Health Matters
Four Keys To Emotional Health Skills
What We Value: Stories of Most Significant Change (MSC) from Physicians, Allied Healthcare Providers, and Patients (Executive Summary)
- Division
-
Central Okanagan Division of Family Practice
-
Kootenay Boundary Division of Family Practice
-
North Peace Division of Family Practice
-
North Shore Division of Family Practice
-
South Island Division of Family Practice
-
South Okanagan Similkameen Division of Family Practice
-
Sunshine Coast Division of Family Practice
- Published Date
-
2020-11
- Link to File
-
/media/divresources/PMHMostSignificantChangeEvaluation_ExecutiveSummary.pdf
- Description
-
"The PMH Most Significant Change Evaluation describes the changes that resulted from Patient Medical Home (PMH) strategies such as the implementation of team-based care with allied health professionals (i.e., pharmacists and social workers), and clarifies the values held by different stakeholders in primary care transformation. The executive summary contains priority next steps for system actors (GPSC, Divisions, and FPs) to address."
- Division
-
Central Okanagan Division of Family Practice
-
Kootenay Boundary Division of Family Practice
-
North Peace Division of Family Practice
-
North Shore Division of Family Practice
-
South Island Division of Family Practice
-
South Okanagan Similkameen Division of Family Practice
-
Sunshine Coast Division of Family Practice
- Corporate Author
-
General Practice Services Committee
- Published Date
-
2020-11
- Topics
-
Patient Medical Home
-
Most Significant Change
-
Team-Based Care
-
Evaluation
-
EMR
- Resource Type
-
Summary
- File Type
-
Pdf
- Link to File
-
/media/divresources/PMHMostSignificantChangeEvaluation_ExecutiveSummary.pdf
- Description
-
The PMH Most Significant Change Evaluation describes the changes that resulted from Patient Medical Home (PMH) strategies such as the implementation of team-based care with allied health professionals (i.e., pharmacists and social workers), and clarifies the values held by different stakeholders in primary care transformation. The executive summary contains priority next steps for system actors (GPSC, Divisions, and FPs) to address.
Less detail
What We Value: Stories of Most Significant Change (MSC) from Physicians, Allied Healthcare Providers, and Patients (Executive Summary)
- Division
-
Central Okanagan Division of Family Practice
-
Kootenay Boundary Division of Family Practice
-
North Peace Division of Family Practice
-
North Shore Division of Family Practice
-
South Island Division of Family Practice
-
South Okanagan Similkameen Division of Family Practice
-
Sunshine Coast Division of Family Practice
- Published Date
-
2020-11
- Link to File
-
/media/divresources/PMHMostSignificantChangeEvaluation_FullReport.pdf
- Description
-
"The PMH Most Significant Change Evaluation describes the changes that resulted from Patient Medical Home (PMH) strategies such as the implementation of team-based care with allied health professionals (i.e., pharmacists and social workers). By collecting, sharing, and reflecting on PMH stories from across BC, this project identifies common and different values held by different stakeholder groups in the BC health system."
- Division
-
Central Okanagan Division of Family Practice
-
Kootenay Boundary Division of Family Practice
-
North Peace Division of Family Practice
-
North Shore Division of Family Practice
-
South Island Division of Family Practice
-
South Okanagan Similkameen Division of Family Practice
-
Sunshine Coast Division of Family Practice
- Corporate Author
-
General Practice Services Committee
- Published Date
-
2020-11
- Topics
-
Patient Medical Home
-
Most Significant Change
-
Team-Based Care
-
Evaluation
-
EMR
- Resource Type
-
Case Study
- File Type
-
Pdf
- Link to File
-
/media/divresources/PMHMostSignificantChangeEvaluation_FullReport.pdf
- Description
-
The PMH Most Significant Change Evaluation describes the changes that resulted from Patient Medical Home (PMH) strategies such as the implementation of team-based care with allied health professionals (i.e., pharmacists and social workers). By collecting, sharing, and reflecting on PMH stories from across BC, this project identifies common and different values held by different stakeholder groups in the BC health system.
Less detail
Burnaby DoFP Neighbourhood Networks Case Study - Executive Summary
- Division
-
Burnaby Division of Family Practice
- Published Date
-
2022-02
- Link to File
-
/media/divresources/BurnabyDoFP_NeighborhoodNetworksCaseStudy_Executive_Summary.pdf
- Description
-
"This document is the executive summary of the Burnaby DoFP Neighbourhood Networks case study. As part of GPSC commitment to the development of physician networks as a key component of primary care system change, the Burnaby DoFP Neighborhood Network case study explores the development and implementation of three neighborhood networks in Burnaby. The creation of neighborhood networks in Burnaby was prompted by family physicians who recognized the need to bring together family physicians from across local communities to increase their interconnectedness, provide opportunities for local Primary Care Network planning, and enable methods for sharing care with each other with the goal of improving patient access to medical care across Burnaby. Burnaby’s neighborhood networks have supported family physicians to connect socially, learn from each other, identify options for locum coverage and after-hours care, and support referrals to specialist care throughout the networks. Key outcomes: family physicians were able to increase patients’ access to care by referring patients to their family physician peers, expanding their use of locums, working on the development of an Urgent and Primary Care Clinic, and procuring additional healthcare resources for the neighborhood networks. A discussion of the neighborhood network's future goals and next steps is included."
- Division
-
Burnaby Division of Family Practice
- Corporate Author
-
General Practice Services Committee
- Published Date
-
2022-02
- Topics
-
Primary Care Network
-
Patient Medical Home
-
Evaluation
- Resource Type
-
Summary
- File Type
-
Pdf
- Link to File
-
/media/divresources/BurnabyDoFP_NeighborhoodNetworksCaseStudy_Executive_Summary.pdf
- Description
-
This document is the executive summary of the Burnaby DoFP Neighbourhood Networks case study. As part of GPSC commitment to the development of physician networks as a key component of primary care system change, the Burnaby DoFP Neighborhood Network case study explores the development and implementation of three neighborhood networks in Burnaby. The creation of neighborhood networks in Burnaby was prompted by family physicians who recognized the need to bring together family physicians from across local communities to increase their interconnectedness, provide opportunities for local Primary Care Network planning, and enable methods for sharing care with each other with the goal of improving patient access to medical care across Burnaby. Burnaby’s neighborhood networks have supported family physicians to connect socially, learn from each other, identify options for locum coverage and after-hours care, and support referrals to specialist care throughout the networks. Key outcomes: family physicians were able to increase patients’ access to care by referring patients to their family physician peers, expanding their use of locums, working on the development of an Urgent and Primary Care Clinic, and procuring additional healthcare resources for the neighborhood networks. A discussion of the neighborhood network's future goals and next steps is included.
Less detail