G
Grant Russell
Researcher at Monash University
Publications - 204
Citations - 5649
Grant Russell is an academic researcher from Monash University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Public health. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 189 publications receiving 4364 citations. Previous affiliations of Grant Russell include University of Ottawa & Monash University, Clayton campus.
Papers
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Patient-centred access to health care: conceptualising access at the interface of health systems and populations
TL;DR: This paper explains the comprehensiveness and dynamic nature of this conceptualisation of access to care and identifies relevant determinants that can have an impact on access from a multilevel perspective where factors related to health systems, institutions, organisations and providers are considered with factors at the individual, household, community, and population levels.
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Managing Chronic Disease in Ontario Primary Care: The Impact of Organizational Factors
TL;DR: The observation that quality of care decreased in larger, busier practices suggests that moves toward larger practices and greater patient-physician ratios may have unanticipated negative effects on processes of care quality.
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Framework for primary care organizations: the importance of a structural domain.
TL;DR: A conceptual framework for primary care was originally developed to guide the measurement of the performance of primary care organizations within the context of a large mixed-method evaluation of four types of models ofPrimary care in Ontario, Canada.
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A narrative synthesis of the impact of primary health care delivery models for refugees in resettlement countries on access, quality and coordination
Chandni Joshi,Grant Russell,I-Hao Cheng,Margaret Kay,Kevin Pottie,Margaret Alston,Mitchell Smith,Bibiana Chan,Shiva Vasi,Winston Lo,Sayed Wahidi,Mark Harris +11 more
TL;DR: The elements of models most frequently associated with improved access, coordination and quality of care were case management, use of specialist refugee health workers, interpreters and bilingual staff.
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Better access to mental health care and the failure of the Medicare principle of universality
TL;DR: To examine whether adult use of mental health services subsidised by Medicare varies by measures of socioeconomic and geographic disadvantage in Australia, a large number of people believe that using a mental health professional is a viable option.