The Research Unit’s foremost goal is to contribute to the improvement and development of the health of patients in the healthcare system, with particular focus on the efforts in and around general practice.
The Research Unit of General Practice houses an interdisciplinary environment with research collaboration between general medicine, psychology, theology, sociology of religion, anthropology, medical risk communication, statistics, health economics, occupational therapy, nursing, midwifery, and public health science. The unit’s interdisciplinary collaboration incorporates multiple methods, both within quantitative and qualitative research.
Research areas
Symptoms, healthcare-seeking and diagnosis
Symptom experiences among people in the general population are common, but the interpretation of symptom experiences differs and only few symptoms are presented to the healthcare system. This research area focuses on the description and analysis of symptom experience among people in the general population and the individuals’ interpretation of symptoms and subsequent healthcare-seeking behaviour.
Organisation of general practice
General practice is currently facing a number of challenges regarding the overall organisation and regulation of the sector. The contribution of this research group is to describe and analyse some of these challenges through interdisciplinary collaboration between general practitioners, economists and other professionals.
Medical risk analysis and medical risk communication
How various measures of risk and benefit are understood and best communicated.
How the communication is perceived among doctors and lay people.
The impact of risk communication on doctors’ diagnosis and treatment strategy and patients’ acceptance of and persistence to an agreed treatment plan.
The applied methods vary from register-based cohort studies, internet-based surveys to clinical intervention studies.
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Relationships in general practice
The purpose of the group” Relationships in general practice” is to generate research-based knowledge of the significance relationships have on health, illness and healing, which will benefit citizens, health professional and society.
Health promotion and prevention of lifestyle-related diseases
Lifestyle-related diseases, such as type-2-diabetes, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and cardiovascular diseases pose a major and global public health problem. Worldwide, 422 million people are currently diagnosed with diabetes mellitus, and cardiovascular disease is the most common cause of mortality, accounting for 29.6% of all deaths (15.6 million deaths) worldwide.
This research group seeks to contribute to a reduction in lifestyle-related diseases by conducting explorative studies and intervention studies in a variety of distinct, yet related areas.
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Quality development - Audit Project Odense (APO)
APO is an independent project at the Research Unit for General Practice in Odense. APO is a resource center for quality development and continuing education in general practice, which also caters to other categories of personnel working in primary health care - e.g., general practitioners, physiotherapists and practitioners. APO's purpose is to develop and execute quality development projects based on activity registration, as well as to analyze the work in general practice in connection with specific projects.
IT and digital health research
The Center for digital health research is aimed at changing the way that health and healthcare are currently being performed, through national and international collaboration and development, innovation and evaluation of digital health solutions
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Cross-sectoral patient handovers
Research in medical education