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ITS NATURE AND CONTENT
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General practice is a traditional method of bringing primary health care to the community. It is a medical discipline in its own right, linking the vast amount of accumulated medical knowledge with the art of communication.
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General practice can be defined as that medical discipline which provides ‘community-based, continuing, comprehensive, preventive primary care’, sometimes referred to as the CCCP model. The RACGP has defined five domains of general practice:
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communication skills and the doctor–patient relationship
applied professional knowledge and skills
population health and the context of general practice
professional and ethical role
organisational and legal dimensions
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Unique features of general practice
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Features that make general practice different from hospital or specialist-based medical practices include:
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first contact and ‘gatekeeper’
diagnostic methodology
early diagnosis of life-threatening and serious disease
continuity and availability of care
personalised care/compassion
care of acute and chronic illness
domiciliary care
emergency care (prompt treatment at home or in the community)
family care
palliative care (at home)
preventive care
scope for health promotion
holistic approach
health care coordination
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Apart from these processes, the GP has to manage very common problems including a whole variety not normally taught in medical school or in postgraduate programs. Many of these problems are unusual yet common, and can be regarded as the ‘nitty gritty’ or ‘bread and butter’ problems of primary health care.