General Practice Activity in Australia 2010-11: General Practice Series No. 29
By (Author) Helena Britt
By (author) Graeme C. Miller
By (author) Janice Charles
Contributions by Joan Henderson
Contributions by Clare Bayram
29
Sydney University Press
Sydney University Press
28th November 2011
Australia
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
610.00
Paperback
169
Width 210mm, Height 297mm, Spine 11mm
525g
The book provides a summary of results from the 13th year of the BEACH program, a continuing national study of general practice activity in Australia.
From April 2010 to March 2011, 958 general practitioners recorded details about 95,800 GP-patient encounters, at which patients presented 149,005 reasons for encounter and 146,141 problems were managed. For an 'average' 100 problems managed, GPs recorded: 69 medications (including 56 prescribed, seven supplied to the patient and six advised for over-the-counter purchase); 11 procedures; 23 clinical treatments (advice and counselling); six referrals to specialists and three to allied health services; orders for 30 pathology tests and six imaging tests.
A subsample study of more than 31,000 patients suggests prevalence of measured risk factors in the attending adult (18 years and over) patient population were: obese - 27 per cent; overweight - 35 per cent; daily smoking - 15 per cent; at-risk alcohol consumption - 25 per cent. One in five people in the attending population had at least two of these risk factors.
A companion publication, A Decade of Australian General Practice Activity 2001-02 to 2010-11 is also available.
Helena Britt is a professor of primary care research at the University of Sydney.
Graeme Miller is an associate professor and Medical Director of the Family Medical Research Centre at the University of Sydney.
Janice Charles is a senior research officer at the Family Medical Research Centre at the University of Sydney.
Joan Henderson is the deputy director of the Family Medical Research Centre at the University of Sydney.