Background: Patients in hospital can develop complaints unrelated to the condition they are admitted for. The treating specialist will then call upon a co-specialist who is specialized in the clinical picture associated with the new complaint. For such a complaint, the GP is usually the first contact, when the patient is not in hospital. Normally specialists only encounter patients GPs have selected for referral. The risk of the specialist overestimating the predictive value of 'unselected' complaints and symptoms of a serious condition is high. This may lead to an overuse of diagnostic treatments. Such treatments weigh more heavily on the patient, cause inadequate use of hospital facilities and, as a consequence, generate higher costs. Bec...
Background: The concept of a General Practitioner with Special Interest (GPwSI) was first proposed i...
Objectives: Despite international debate over growing pressures on hospital beds, particularly from ...
Objectives: Patients with acute symptoms present not only to general practitioners (GPs), but also f...
Background: Patients in hospital can develop complaints unrelated to the condition they are admitted...
Background: Referrals of patients from primary care to medical specialist care are an important acti...
Contains fulltext : 50477.pdf ( ) (Open Access)BACKGROUND: Referrals of patients f...
Background: Within the health system, communication between the different levels of care is essentia...
INTRODUCTION: Optimal collaboration between general practice and hospital care is crucial to maintai...
Background: The referral process between first and second line health care is complex and multidimen...
BACKGROUND: The workload at many outpatient clinics within the Dutch health care system has been gro...
Background: In Australia and in the United Kingdom (UK) access to specialists is sanctioned by Gener...
Kingdom, involving the general practitioner (GP) as gate-keeper to further services, has helped to k...
INTRODUCTION: Optimal collaboration between general practice and hospital care is crucial to maintai...
There is a large and unexplained variation in referral rates to specialists by general practitioners...
open access articleObjective: To describe the nature of patient concerns and to explore if, when and...
Background: The concept of a General Practitioner with Special Interest (GPwSI) was first proposed i...
Objectives: Despite international debate over growing pressures on hospital beds, particularly from ...
Objectives: Patients with acute symptoms present not only to general practitioners (GPs), but also f...
Background: Patients in hospital can develop complaints unrelated to the condition they are admitted...
Background: Referrals of patients from primary care to medical specialist care are an important acti...
Contains fulltext : 50477.pdf ( ) (Open Access)BACKGROUND: Referrals of patients f...
Background: Within the health system, communication between the different levels of care is essentia...
INTRODUCTION: Optimal collaboration between general practice and hospital care is crucial to maintai...
Background: The referral process between first and second line health care is complex and multidimen...
BACKGROUND: The workload at many outpatient clinics within the Dutch health care system has been gro...
Background: In Australia and in the United Kingdom (UK) access to specialists is sanctioned by Gener...
Kingdom, involving the general practitioner (GP) as gate-keeper to further services, has helped to k...
INTRODUCTION: Optimal collaboration between general practice and hospital care is crucial to maintai...
There is a large and unexplained variation in referral rates to specialists by general practitioners...
open access articleObjective: To describe the nature of patient concerns and to explore if, when and...
Background: The concept of a General Practitioner with Special Interest (GPwSI) was first proposed i...
Objectives: Despite international debate over growing pressures on hospital beds, particularly from ...
Objectives: Patients with acute symptoms present not only to general practitioners (GPs), but also f...