This year, World Family Doctor Day (Monday 19 May) highlights the role family doctor's play in supporting patient and community mental health and wellbeing.
Family medicine fosters mental wellness through trust and continuity of care. Primary health care is uniquely positioned to promote mental wellness due to its emphasis on long-term relationships, continuity of care, and patient-centred approaches. Through early intervention, lifestyle medicine, and a holistic understanding of patients' lives, we family doctors can identify and manage mental health challenges before they become crises.
Doctor wellbeing and patient care reinforce each other. Family doctors who look after their own mental wellness are better equipped to care for their patients. At the same time, effectively caring for patients provides doctors with purpose and fulfilment. This cycle ensures that both doctors and patients thrive together, creating a healthier and more resilient healthcare system.
Acknowledging suffering and offering hope. The most profound impact a family doctor can have for a struggling patient is to listen—deeply and without judgment. Acknowledging suffering is the first step towards healing, followed by exploration of meaning. By offering compassionate support and realistic hope, we family doctors help their patients navigate difficult times and move toward recovery.
A thriving doctor means a thriving community. When family doctors are supported, their patients and communities benefit. WONCA fosters a global peer support network that strengthens the family medicine community, ensuring doctors feel valued and connected, which ultimately enhances patient care and public health.
Mental health is about resilience and adaptability. Inspired by the concept of eudaimonia—which consists of the words "eu" (good) and "daimōn" (spirit) and defines a contented dynamic process of wellbeing, happiness, health, prosperity, physical/mental independence and active community membership— our goal is to enhance our patients' sense of agency and coherence, and equip them with the ability to navigate life's challenges.
Kia kaha family doctors!
The Te Tumu Waiora integrated mental health and wellbeing service has been up and running in general practices in Taupō and Tūrangi since July 2019. The response from practices and the community has been overwhelmingly positive.
Read moreBay of Plenty/Waikato Faculty of RNZCGP invites all GPs (including non-faculty members) and GP registrars in the GPEP programme (years 1-3) to register for collegial support service – Ka Hono.
Read moreThis service is designed to support a co-response team where mental health clinicians, kaimahi Māori, Police and St John will work together when responding to mental health emergency calls.
View detailsIn addition to Pinnacle MHN primary mental health services, here are some other alternatives that may be available.