| Literature DB >> 20467908 |
Diane R Rittenhouse1, David H Thom, Julie A Schmittdiel.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Patient-Centered Medical Home (PCMH) is a widely endorsed model of delivery system reform that emphasizes primary care. Pilot demonstration projects are underway in many states, sponsored by Medicare, Medicaid, major health plans and multi-payer coalitions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20467908 PMCID: PMC2869424 DOI: 10.1007/s11606-010-1289-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gen Intern Med ISSN: 0884-8734 Impact factor: 5.128
Joint Principles of the Patient-Centered Medical Home (PCMH) and PCMH Cornerstones
| Joint principles of the PCMHa | PCMH cornerstonesb |
|---|---|
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. | 1. 2. 3. 4. |
| *Payment reform: Calls for a payment structure that combines fee-for-service, pay-for performance, and a separate payment for care coordination and integration. Explicitly intended to compensate for care coordination, care management, and medical consultation outside the traditional face-to-face visit. Includes for financial recognition of case-mix differences, the adoption and use of clinical information technology for quality improvement, savings from reduced hospitalizations, and the achievement of quality targets | |
aJoint Principles of the Patient Centered Medical Home | Patient Centered Primary Care Collaborative. Available at: http://www.pcpcc.net/content/joint-principles-patient-centered-medical-home. Accessed August 28, 2009
bRittenhouse DR, Shortell SM. The patient-centered medical home: will it stand the test of health reform? JAMA. 2009;301(19):2038-4
Framework and Examples of Available Community-Based Measures Relevant to Assessing the Impact of the PCMH
| General area | Specific area | Examples of population measures potentially sensitive to the adoption of the PCMH | Sources of data or survey instruments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Health promotion and disease prevention | Vaccination and screening | Vaccination rates at time of entry into kindergarten; | State and county health departments; CHIS, CMS, NIS |
| Percent of adults >65 vaccinated for pneumococcus; | |||
| Mammograms; | |||
| Pap smears | |||
| Risk behaviors and risk factors | Tobacco use; | BRFSS; CHIS, NHIS; YRBSS | |
| Alcohol and drug abuse; | |||
| Risky sexual behaviors; | |||
| Obesity; | |||
| Hypertension | |||
| Preventable conditions | Incident of sexually transmitted infections (STIs); | State and county public health departments; NVSS | |
| Incidence of teenage pregnancies; | |||
| Violence related mortality; | |||
| Low birth weight neonates and infant mortality | |||
| Chronic disease management | Avoidable complications | Emergency visits and hospitalizations for primary care sensitive (PCS) conditions (e.g., diabetes, chronic lung disease and congestive heart failure); | HCUP, NHDS |
| Early readmissions for PCS conditions | |||
| Mortality | Mortality from tobacco related diseases; | NVSS | |
| Mortality post-stroke | |||
| Efficiency and access | Communication | Use and sharing of electronic medical records by practices, hospitals and pharmacies | None found |
| Coordination and continuity of care | % of visits with PCP; | CMS, CTS/CQI | |
| % of specialist visits preceded by a PCP visit; | |||
| % of all visits to same PCP; | |||
| % of patients discharge from hospitalization for PCS seen by PCP within 2 weeks | |||
| Costs | Lost work days; | CMS; CNS; CTS/CQI, HCUP, MEPS, MarketScan | |
| Procedures; | |||
| Avoidable emergency visits and hospitalizations | |||
| Access | % with identified PCP; | CHIS, CNS, CTS/CQI | |
| % with a primary care visit in past 12 months; | |||
| Number of prenatal visits | |||
| Equity | Surveys which collect data on race, ethnicity, language, income and/or education | BRFSS, HCUP, NDUH, NIS, NVSS, YRBSS |
Acronyms for measures (sources):
BRFSS = Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (NCHS, CDC)
CHIS = California Health Interview Survey (State of California)
CMS = Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services administrative data (HHS)
CTS/CQI = Community Tracking Study Household Survey/ Community Quality Index
HCUP= Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (AHRQ)
MEPS = Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (AHRQ)
NHIS = National Health Interview Survey (CDC)
NHDS = National Hospital Discharge Survey (CDC)
NIS = National Immunization Survey (NCHS, CDC)
NVSS = National Vital Statistics System (NCHS, CDC)
NSDUH = National Survey on Drug Use and Health (SAMHSA)
YRBSS = Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System (CDC)
Acronyms of sources:
AHRQ = Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
CDC = Center for Disease Control
HHS = US Department of Health and Human Services
NCHS = National Center for Health Statistics
SAMHSA = Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
Developing a Long-Term Policy-Relevant Research Agenda for PCMH Outcomes: Exemplar Research Questions
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| • What are the best measures of clinical effectiveness that are sensitive to the PCMH model; measurable at the level of the practice or community; and feasible to collect? |
| • Which clinical processes are most closely related to health outcomes and therefore should be measured to determine effectiveness? |
| • What are the evidence-based measures of patient safety in the ambulatory care setting that are sensitive to the PCMH model? |
| • What are the best measures of patient-centeredness, above and beyond patient satisfaction or experience? |
| • What are the best measures of “timeliness” that can be measured at the level of the practice and community? How is timeliness linked to health outcomes, patient experience, and efficiency? |
| • How is efficiency best defined and measured with regard to the PCMH? |
| • What is the best set of measures to determine that health care delivered under the PCMH model is equitable—that is it does not differ in quality based on personal characteristics such as gender, ethnicity, geographic location, and socioeconomic status? |
| • What are other measures that should be considered in evaluating the outcomes of the PCMH that go beyond the IOM framework, for example, measures of workforce supply or provider satisfaction? |
| • What is the impact of non visit-based care on the six IOM aims? |
| • What are the best measures of unintended consequences of the PMCH model that would allow for early recognition of problems with model specifications? |
| • How large a set of core outcome measures can reasonably be collected and which measures should be included as high-value, core measures? |
| • How does choice of PCMH outcomes measures depend on the perspective of purchasers, payers, communities, providers, or patients? |
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| • How can the patients of a medical practice be identified for the purposes of measuring PCMH outcomes? |
| • To what extent do individual physicians need to be linked to particular practices for the purposes of measuring practice-level outcomes? How can this best be accomplished? |
| • How can a population-based community be defined for the purposes of measuring PCMH outcomes? |
| • Which outcomes measures are best assessed at the level of the practice and which are best measured at the level of the community? |
| • How can the extent of adoption of the PCMH model within a community be measured? |
| • What is the level of adoption of the PCMH model that is necessary to produce changes in community health outcomes? |
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| • When measuring its relationship to health care outcomes, to what extent does the PCMH model function as an integrated whole, rather than simply as a collection of components such as team-based care, advanced access scheduling, and chronic disease registries? |
| • In what ways can evaluation efforts be affected by “gaming” of performance measures by practices and providers? |
| • What is the best method for case-mix adjustment and how is patient preference included in outcomes calculations? |
| • What are the sample size challenges faced when trying to measure practice-level PCMH outcomes in very small physician practices? How are these challenges best addressed? |
| • How can “appropriateness” best be defined and measured to detect overuse of inappropriate or unnecessary interventions, as well as underuse of necessary treatments? |
| • Do the outcomes measurement issues and priorities differ among the major categories of physician practices (e.g., large integrated delivery systems, solo physician practices, FQHCs) or within different types of communities (for example, chronically underserved communities)? |
| • How do concepts such as “integration,” “continuity,” “patient-physician relationship,” “comprehensiveness,” “patient trust,” and “care transitions within and between care settings” relate to the measurement of PCMH outcomes? |
| • What is the role of specialist and hospital practices in ensuring positive patient outcomes from the PCMH (e.g., timely communication, etc.) |
| • Who will be responsible for collecting data, evaluating impacts, and tracking changes over time at the level of the practice and the community? |
| • What will be the intended or unintended connection between outcomes measurement and other efforts such as practice accreditation or certification, public reporting, and/or pay for performance? To what extent can these ongoing measurement activities be harnessed to yield outcomes for evaluating the impact of the PCMH? |
| • What uses of outcome measures will be most effective in promoting high performing medical homes (e.g., practitioner feedback, public reporting, pay for performance)? |