Abstract
This article introduces a journal supplement evaluating the country’s first national demonstration of the patient-centered medical home (PCMH) concept. The PCMH is touted by some as a linchpin for renewing the foundering US health care system and its primary care foundation.
The National Demonstration Project (NDP) tested a new model of care and compared facilitated and self-directed implementation approaches in a group-randomized clinical trial. The NDP asked what a national sample of 36 highly motivated family practices could accomplish in moving toward the PCMH ideal during 2 years within the current US health care payment and organizational system. Our independent evaluation used a multimethod approach that integrated qualitative methods to tell the NDP story from multiple perspectives and quantitative methods to assess and compare aspects that could be measured. The 7 scientific reports presented in this supplement explain the process, outcomes, lessons, and implications of the NDP.
This introductory article provides context for making sense of the NDP. Important context includes the evolution of the PCMH concept and movement, the roots of the NDP and how it developed, and both what is valuable and what is problematic about family medicine and primary care.
Together, the articles in this supplement show how primary care practices and the concept of the PCMH can continue to evolve. The evaluation depicts some of the early effects of this evolution on patients and practices, and shows how the process of practice development can be understood and how lessons from the NDP can inform ongoing and future efforts to transform primary care and health care systems.
Keywords: Primary care, family practice, National Demonstration Project, organizational change, quality improvement, patient-centered medical home, patient-centered care, practice-based research
INTRODUCTION
This article and the journal supplement it introduces are about the promise of primary care, the growing frustrations of not meeting that promise, and the strategies recently envisioned to try to rediscover the lost promise. The supplement, which follows up on an earlier report,1 weaves together different threads about one recent particular part of the story, the implementation and evaluation of the National Demonstration Project (NDP) of the patient-centered medical home (PCMH).
SEVEN REPORTS THAT TOGETHER TELL A STORY
The NDP tested a new model of care and compared facilitated and self-directed approaches to implementing this model in a group-randomized clinical trial. The NDP asked what a national sample of 36 highly motivated family practices could accomplish in moving toward the PCMH ideal during 2 years within the current US health care payment and organizational system. The project was independently evaluated using a multi-method approach that integrated qualitative methods to tell the NDP story from multiple perspectives and quantitative methods to assess and compare aspects that could be measured. Collectively, the 7 reports/articles in this supplement, listed in Table 1▶, explain the process, outcomes, lessons, and implications of the NDP.
Table 1.
|
AAFP = American Academy of Family Physicians.
The first report2 explains the multimethod approach required to evaluate the NDP. The use of both quantitative and qualitative methods in a clinical trial in which practices were randomized to facilitated and self-directed implementation approaches enabled an evolving intervention to be comprehensively assessed and understood in a changing environment. Ongoing feedback allowed the intervention team to adapt their approach to emerging insights.
The next report3 portrays how the NDP unfolded as seen by the independent evaluators. This article shows how the concept of a new model of practice, the personal medical home, changed as the TransforMED implementation organization, the PCMH movement, and the health care system evolved together during a turbulent time in American health care.
The third report4 examines the degree to which the wide range of NDP model components were implemented. This article also compares facilitated and self-directed practices on 3 practice-level outcomes: the proportion of the NDP model components implemented, the practices’ capability to make and sustain change, and an aggregate measure of the patient’s experience with the practice.
The fourth report5 brings to life the journeys experienced by the facilitated and self-directed practices during the NDP. This article uses case descriptions to explain variations in time, strategy, and resources that enabled or limited practice development.
The fifth report6 assesses the effect of the NDP intervention on patients and on the process of patient care. Two complementary categories of quality of care were assessed: patient report of multiple domains of their experience of health care and medical record–based measures of care for specific conditions and categories of care.
The sixth report7 describes new ways of understanding and approaching the practice development process. This article aims to provide insight for those who are planning and implementing change.
The closing report8 examines policy and practice implications of the NDP for those attempting to develop primary care and the health care system to improve health care, and ultimately the health, of the people they serve.
The articles in this supplement, like the NDP itself, must be understood in context. This context includes the evolution of the PCMH concept and movement, the roots of the NDP, and the value of and problems with family medicine and primary care.
EVOLUTION OF THE PCMH CONCEPT AND MOVEMENT
The PCMH, like primary care, is rooted in the long tradition of generalist healers.9–18 These healers base their technical approaches on ongoing relationships and local knowledge of individuals, families, and communities.
Table 2▶ displays a time line of the evolution of the more recent PCMH concept and movement. The PCMH is a political construct43 that includes new ways of organizing and financing care, while attempting to remain true to the proven value of primary care.44 The American Academy of Pediatrics’ call for a model to organize the care of children with complex health care needs.19–22 The idea was taken up later by other medical organizations developing models of revitalized primary care.28,32,36 The PCMH continues to evolve in the context of other national movements calling for transformative changes in health care organization.27,45,46
Table 2.
Year | Event |
---|---|
1967 | The AAP introduces the medical home concept to coordinate care for children with multiple needs (expanded model with 13 elements was introduced in 2002)19–22 |
1992 | Barbara Starfield summarizes the evidence for the essential attributes of primary care for a high-functioning health care system23 (updated in 199824 and 200525) |
1996 | The Institute of Medicine “advocates development and sustained support of means to make primary care available to all Americans,”26(p1) and notes: “First, primary care is the logical basis of an effective health care system. Second, primary care is essential to reaching the objectives that constitute value in health care”26(p52) |
2001 | The Institute of Medicine Crossing the Quality Chasm report calls for transforming a “fundamentally flawed” US health care system27 |
2004 | In the Future of Family Medicine Project, 7 family medicine organizations propose a “New Model” of care, the “personal medical home”28,29 |
2005 | TransforMED is created as a subsidiary of the AAFP to test the “New Model.” (The model evolves to encompass PCMH features,30 but includes no payment reform— a key tenet of the PCMH) |
2005 | The Commonwealth Fund proposes a “2020 vision of patient-centered care”31 (and later begins funding pilot programs) |
2006 | The ACP proposes the advanced medical home, which includes principal care as well as primary care32 |
2006 | Medical home demonstration projects within Medicare are called for in the Tax Relief and Health Care Act, to be implemented by 2010.33 |
2006 | The NDP is launched34 |
2007 | Four organizations (AAFP, AAP, ACP, AOA) jointly issue a statement on the PCMH in February35 |
2007 | The Patient-Centered Primary Care Collaborative is launched in March36 |
2007 | The NCQA launches a tool—Physician Practice Connections–Patient-Centered Medical Home (PPC-PCMH)—which preemptively become the de facto standard for recognition as a PCMH37 |
2008 | WHO declares 2008 the year of primary health care38,39 |
2009 | Multiple pilot projects are in process and early findings begin to be published1,40–42 |
2009 | Incorporation of the PCMH in federal and state reform legislation increases, and the number of demonstration projects and individual practice and system efforts grows |
AAP = American Academy of Pediatrics; AAFP = American Academy of Family Physicians; ACP = American College of Physicians; AOA = American Osteopathic Association; NCQA = National Committee on Quality Assurance; NDP = National Demonstration Project; PCMH = patient-centered medical home; WHO = World Health Organization.
A joint statement initially made by 4 medical professional organizations35 that have been joined by a growing number of others36 articulates principles for the PCMH. These principles are summarized in the Supplemental Appendix, available online only, at http://annfammed.org/cgi/content/full/8/suppl_1/s2/DC1. The Patient-Centered Primary Care Collaborative36 has brought together partners from large national employers, primary care physician associations, health care benefits companies, and patient and health care quality associations to advocate for and advance the PCMH. Recent federal and state legislation also is promoting the PCMH.47
Currently, hundreds of PCMH demonstration projects are being conducted around the country.36,40,41 Some of these projects include various attempts at different ways of paying for primary care for recognized PCMH practices or, on occasion, for particular components of the PCMH.48 Amidst a measurement/accountability culture and widely perceived need to control costs, a tool developed by National Committee on Quality Assurance (NCQA)37 has become the de facto standard for recognition as a PCMH, despite concerns about its focus on technical aspects of practice that can be easily measured49 and the potential for unintended consequences from implicitly devaluing relationship aspects of primary care that are essential but more difficult to measure.1,44,50
THE NDP IN CONTEXT
In 2002, 7 national family medicine organizations launched the Future of Family Medicine Project with a goal to “develop a strategy to transform and renew the discipline of family medicine to meet the needs of patients in a changing health care environment.”28(ps4) Project participants conducted research, developed 7 reports, and acted on their recommendations.28,29,51–55 While reaffirming the “core values of continuing, comprehensive, compassionate, and personal care provided within the context of family and community,”28(ps11) a major focus of the project’s research and policy development was a “New Model” of practice51 to accompany recommended health care system changes. The features of this new model51 emphasize a personal medical home that involves redesigned practices and can be seen online.28 The report also asserts that a “financially self-sustaining national resource will be implemented to provide practices with ongoing support in the transition to the New Model of family medicine.”28(ps4)
In 2005, this new national resource was launched as a wholly-owned subsidiary of the American Academy of Family Physicians, called TransforMED.56 In the fall of that year, an invitation was widely distributed inviting family practices to participate in a national demonstration project of the “New Model” of family medicine. In March 2006, 36 participating practices were announced and randomized to facilitated and self-directed intervention groups. In June 2006, the NDP project began. Its focus was on assessing the ability of practices to make transformative changes with help from a TransforMED facilitator or on their own. This project did not include payment reform, 1 of the 7 principles of the PCMH (Supplemental Appendix).
The authors of the current article were engaged early in this process as an independent evaluation team, funded by the American Academy of Family Physicians and The Commonwealth Fund, and with the authority to publish findings without prior review by the sponsors. Using the methods overviewed by Jaén et al,2 we embarked on describing the process, outcome, and lessons of the NDP, and provided early insights from ongoing analyses to TransforMED, to inform the continued evolution of their work with practices. A previous report shared early lessons with the larger health care community.1
WHAT IS VALUABLE AND WHAT IS PROBLEMATIC ABOUT FAMILY MEDICINE AND PRIMARY CARE
Health care systems based on primary care have better quality,57 lower cost,57–59 less inequality in health care and health,25,38,60–63 and better population health.25,59,64 These attributes of primary care emerge from synergy among the following factors, known as the 4 pillars of primary care13,24,26,65–68:
Easy access to first-contact care: accessibility as the first contact of patients with the health care system
Comprehensive care: accountability for addressing a large majority of personal health care needs
Coordination of care: integration and coordination of care in different settings, and across different domains that include acute and (often comorbid) chronic illnesses, mental health, disease prevention, and health promotion—guiding access to more narrowly focused care when needed
Personal relationship over time: sustained partnership and personal relationship over time, with patients known in the context of their family and community (also known as continuity)
Among the many dysfunctions of the US health care system27 is its lack of focus on primary care.69–71 This devaluing of primary care has reduced its effectiveness to the point where the need for fundamental change is widely recognized.72,73 As others have noted, change is needed both within the primary care enterprise28 and in the larger system in which it is embedded.28,70,74
Primary care is the canary in the mine of the broken US health care system.65 Although there are hopeful exceptions,17,75–77 the current payment system78,79 and (mis)conceptualizations about what represents quality in primary care66–68,80,81 have engendered what has been called a hamster-on-a-wheel approach to care.82,83 In this fragmented health care environment,81 the focus of primary care has been distracted from the fundamental need for relationships with patients, communities, and other parts of the health care system.84,85 Primary care increasingly has narrowed the scope and place of its care, and diminished its availability at the times of patients’ greatest need.86–88 In addition, primary care often has been physician- and practice-centric in its approach, and has not sufficiently used technology, a team approach, and patient enablement to foster access, integration of care, and development of relationships.89–94 These are among the problems that the “New Model” and the PCMH are intended to resolve.
A WAY FORWARD
The articles in this supplement demonstrate that it is possible for highly motivated, largely independent practices3 to implement most of the predominantly technological components of the PCMH.4 This implementation results in improved indicators of chronic disease care as assessed from medical records, but at the cost of reducing the quality of key attributes of primary care as rated by patients, at least over the 26 months of the NDP.4,6 The project’s multimethod evaluation2 also shows that understanding the process of developing practices’ internal capabilities is critical to successfully managing change.5,7 As the PCMH continues to evolve, both practice and system reforms are needed to make it easier to integrate, personalize, and prioritize care for whole people, communities, and populations.8
Acknowledgments
The NDP was designed and implemented by TransforMED, LLC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of the AAFP. We are indebted to the participants in the NDP and to TransforMED for their tireless work. We also are grateful to the practices and people that participated in the NDP.
In the facilitated group: Bay Crossing Family Medicine, Annapolis, Maryland; Central Oregon Family Medicine, PC, Redmond, Oregon; Cranford Family Practice, Cranford, New Jersey; Family Health Center of Joplin, Inc, Joplin, Missouri; Family Medicine, Geriatrics and Wellness, Lower Gwynedd, Pennsylvania; Family Practice Partners, Murfreesboro, Tennessee; Harbor of Health, Memphis, Tennessee; Hays Family Medicine, Hays, Kansas; Indian Land Primary Care, Indian Land, South Carolina; James J. Meyer, MD, PC, Littleton, Colorado; LifeScape Medical Associates, Scottsdale, Arizona; MHS Primary Care, Inc, Cromwell Family Practice, Cromwell, Connecticut; Myrtue Medical Center, Harlan, Iowa; Stephen J. Veit, MD, PC, Cherokee, Iowa; Trinity Clinic–Whitehouse, Whitehouse, Texas; Westshore Family Medicine, Muskegon, Michigan; and Wood River Family Medicine Clinic, Hailey, Idaho.
In the self-directed group: DHMC, Community Health Center, Lebanon, New Hampshire; Carondelet Medical Group, Tucson, Arizona; Crossroads Family Practice, North Garden, Virginia; Duncan Medical Associates, PC, Duncan, Oklahoma; Harborwood Family Medicine at the Lakes, Muskegon, Michigan; Henry County Family Physicians, Inc, Napoleon, Ohio; Kollman Clinic, Inc, Dover, Ohio; Lifetime Family Medicine, Haymarket, Virginia; Neil A. Patterson, MD, PA, Oviedo, Florida; Olio Road Family Care, Fishers, Indiana; Piedmont Family Care, Piedmont, Oklahoma; Romeo Medical Clinic, Turlock, California; Seaport Family Practice, Belfast, Maine; and Sommerville Family Practice, PC, Midlothian, Virginia.
Conflicts of interest: The authors’ funding partially supports their time devoted to the evaluation, but they have no financial stake in the outcome. The authors’ agreement with the funders gives them complete independence in conducting the evaluation and allows them to publish the findings without prior review by the funders. The authors have full access to and control of study data. The funders had no role in writing or submitting the manuscript.
Disclaimer: Drs Stange and Nutting, who are editors of the Annals, were not involved in the editorial evaluation of or decision to publish this article.
Funding support: The independent evaluation of the National Demonstration Project (NDP) practices was supported by the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP) and The Commonwealth Fund. The Commonwealth Fund is a national, private foundation based in New York City that supports independent research on health care issues and makes grants to improve health care practice and policy.
Publication of the journal supplement is supported by the American Academy of Family Physicians Foundation, the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine Foundation, the American Board of Family Medicine Foundation, and The Commonwealth Fund.
Dr Stange’s time was supported in part by a Clinical Research Professorship from the American Cancer Society.
Disclaimer: The views presented here are those of the authors and not necessarily those of The Commonwealth Fund, its directors, officers, or staff.
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