Læknablaðið

Volume

Læknablaðið - 01.04.1979, Page 88

Læknablaðið - 01.04.1979, Page 88
108 LÆKNABLAÐIÐ primary health care was one of supervision and secondary referral. Those doctors more interes- ted were actively involved and played an im- portant role not only as municipal medical officers and providing the prescribed doctor contacts within the MCH framework but also as members of the municipal health boards and leaders of civic organizations in the community. Others left the development of these services largely to the public health nurses and mid- wives and it is important to realize their central role in both planning and provision of services. From the base of MCH work they were also involved in school health and primary medical care for the adult population especially in large rural municipalities and more remote rural areas. Many public health nurses functioned in practice as „assistant medical officers". Municipal responsibility for environmental health, occupational health and food hygiene also developed during the early decades of this century. Leadership in environmental health at the municipal level has in Finland traditio- nally been provided by the veterinary surgeon and this is still true in most areas. The reason lies in the fact that milk control was the earliest responsibility and this was supervised by the municipally employed veterinarian. Health inspectors carried out the field activi- ties. Gradually, other environmental health funetions were added and municipal environ- mental health and hygiene laboratories estab- lished but the total function remained under the Leadership of the veterinarian. 3. DEVELOPMENT OF MEDICAL SERVICES INFLUENCING PRIMARY HEALTH CARE Also in the field of medieal care and hospital services the municipalities have played an im- portant role. The earliest regional hospitals were established by the central government, but very soon large municipalities built their own hospitals. The next step was for municipalities to join together into municipal leagues and build and run their hospitals together. A model of central government support was developed similar to that for the basic health service and later the system was rationalized through appropriate legislation. In this way, through special acts, a national hospital ðystem for tuberculosis was established in 1948, for general medical care through regional hospitals in 1950 and for mental hospitals in 1952. These hospi- tals are run by groups of munieipalities through appropriate organizations and are financed through an approximately 50—50 model of local and central funds. During the intensive development of the hospital network in the 1950s and 1960s most of the resources went into this area with the pri- mary care sector receiving less attention and continuing to function along the lines outlined above. This led to an overemphasis both in the minds of the public, their elected legislators and other decision makers on hospitals and a preoccupation with the „medical model“. This development also led to a strong emphasis on training of doctors to staff the hospitals with little emphasis in their training on the needs of the basic health service or of primary health care. The same was true also to some extent of the training of nurses although there conti- nued to be good training programmes for community health nurses. Another reform during the 1960s was the introduction of compulsory national sickness insurance to assist with the rising cost of medi- cal care, support people through illness and convalescence and with transport cost to seek care. This legislation is referred to as sickness insurance as it does not basically promote health care as such. The attempts during the 1970s to develop comphrehensive primary health care should be seen against the background of the 1950s and 1960s. k. PRIMARY HEALTH ACT OF 1912 Among the background factors to this act the following ones were evident around 1970: — of the health resources 90% went into specia- lized medical care and only 10% for primary health care — total health expenditure rose twice as fast during the 1960s as he GNP — apart from favourable indicators for infants and children all other health indicators for the population showed no improvement and in some cases even negative development — increasing awareness that there had been one-sided development of the health service system leading to a lack of primary care services — a realization that changes could only be achieved politically through a determined and planned development of health policy affecting the distribution of available re- sources to both primary care and hospital services as well as developing those service functions based on nationally decided priori- ties. It was therefore decided to put the main emphasis on health care and primary care and to provide the necessary administrative and financial structures for the rapid and planned development of the municipal primary care system. The Act gives the general outlines but the details are provided through: — rolling five-year plans approved annually by Cabinet — corresponding plans at the level of munici- palities — directives and regulations given by health authorities — funds provided annually by parliament and municipal political bodies. Similar five-year plans were introduced also for the hospital system.
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