Author:
Ellis Niki,Mackenzie Alison,Mobbs Robyn
Abstract
In Australia greater attention is being given to
health determinants, and the dominance of treatment
in health policy and budgets is giving away
some ground to prevention, health promotion,
rehabilitation and disability management. This
creates a dilemma for compensation systems:
should the inclusion criteria be broadened to
match the new thinking or should a narrower
definition of ?disease, injury or death? be retained?
This issue is explored in the context of war
syndromes among veterans. While veterans experience
symptoms more frequently and more
severely than military and community controls,
their patterns of symptoms are not unique. Current
compensation and benefit programs can create
iatrogenic effects. It is concluded that
compensation systems should be kept as safety
nets while resources are provided to improve the
capacity of primary health care caregivers, community
organisations and veterans with war syndromes
and their families to better deal with these
problems. Adapting compensation systems to promote
wellness through self-management health
partnerships is one way of directing resources to
individuals and their families. Action research at
the community level with veterans, their families,
their organisations, primary health care organisations,
policy makers and researchers would allow
this sector to work out the best way to apply
existing efficacious tools to these modern health
problems.
Cited by
2 articles.
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