Dr. Graham Watt is a Professor of General Practice and Primary Care at the University of Glasgow.

Click on the videos for highlights from Graham Watt’s talk Moving from Rhetoric to Action: Lessons from the “Deep End” of Scotland on how Dialogue and Evaluative Thinking can Help Find Solutions to Health Inequities in which he discusses the need to reduce existing inequalities in health and the results of a project that brought together 100 general practitioners from the poorest regions in Scotland to design targeted solutions to address the inverse care law.

These clips touch on just a few of Watt’s key points including:

  • The historic case for revitalizing system expectations

  • How power is currently coordinated

  • Strategies to strengthen local health systems

  • Increasing patient enablement

 

Click here for an audio recording of the Moving from Rhetoric to Action: Lessons from the “Deep End” of Scotland on how Dialogue and Evaluative Thinking can Help Find Solutions to Health Inequities panel, including responses from Colleen Duggan, Senior Program Specialist for Corporate Strategy and Evaluation at the International Development Research Centre (IRDC), Dr. Jim Lavery, Research Scientist at St. Michael’s Hospital, Dr. Gary Bloch, Family Physician at St. Michael’s Hospital, Dr. Bob Gardner, Director of Policy at the Wellesley Institute, and Lynne Raskin, Executive Director at South Riverdale Community Health Centre.


coming soon.
 
 
 

Graham Watt (Part 1 of 3)

 

Graham Watt (Part 2 of 3)

 

Graham Watt (Part 3 of 3)

 

Graham Watt Presentation Slides

 

Graham Watt. Looking beyond “the house of care” for long term conditions. Some patients are at risk of being left outside. (BMJ, 2013)

 

Enabling health and wellbeing among older people;
Capitalising on resources in deprived areas through general practice

 

The Review: Bridging the gaps in cardiovascular care

 

RE-IMAGINING PRIMARY CARE Professor Graham Watt Keynote presentation to the Scottish School of Primary Care Inverness, Thursday 25th April 2013

 

Deep End Report 18 - Integrated care

 

 
Evaluating Complex Interventions