Patient Centered Medical Home
Patient Centered Primary Care:
A Revolution in Health Care in the US
Employers that subsidize health care coverage want to provide access to care that delivers excellent outcomes, creates patient confidence and satisfaction and is affordable for all who pay -- a challenge we have yet to meet. For many companies, increases in the cost of health care far outpace increases in revenues and wages, yet nearly half of the U.S. general public is dissatisfied with the care they receive.
The patient centric primary care alternative
We also know that primary care -- a single and continuous source for comprehensive care that considers the whole person, along with his or her family and community -- supported by up-to-date and complete information that allows medical professionals to make good clinical decisions, has a far different outcome.
Research studies in countries where patient-physician relationships focus on primary care consistently show that people live longer, populations are healthier, patients are more satisfied with their care and everyone pays less. These "primary care providers" do more preventive health counseling, perform more screenings and immunizations, and provide care advocacy and coordination that lead to lower rates of death for heart disease, cancer, and stroke; and lower rates of hospitalizations for ambulatory care sensitive diagnoses like pneumonia. Chronic condition management and medical errors and omissions are significantly reduced with this "patient-centered" primary care.
Primary care is not gate keeping or restricting access to care. A primary care practitioner is a partner in care, a coach, an advisor and the person who assumes overall responsibility for coordinating care among all heath service providers, always focusing on the best interests and personal preferences of the patient.
A Call To Action
Transforming the current health care environment to one that emphasizes "'patient centric primary care" is within our reach. Models for the primary care practice, which creates a "medical home" for patients exist today. Technology systems and tools to modernize medical record keeping, transform the exchange of medical information, and revolutionize treatment are all around us. Employers have led initiatives to establish quality measures for physicians and hospitals, promote price transparency, tackle the crisis of the uninsured, and address other health care system deficiencies. "Patient-centric primary care'" needs this kind of bold leadership from the employer community.
THE PATIENT CENTERED CARE ALTERNATIVE
Medical practitioners, governments, and financing entities in the U.S. and a number of other countries are applying “patient-centric” approaches to health care. “Patient-centric” does not imply a fixed set of guidelines; rather it is a fluid and still-evolving definition characterized by practices that benefit the patient: ensuring that they have timely access to medical care, are supported to actively participate in their care, receive the best treatment, at a reasonable cost, while putting into place strategies that will help individuals avoid becoming sick in the first place
Putting the needs of the patient first
Patient-centric models put the needs of the patient first, but require greater responsibility and accountability. Under a patient-centric system, an individual has the right to expect improved care as long as they educate themselves about health maintenance and wellness practices, change their behaviors to better manage their health, access health, provider quality and price information, and contribute an appropriate share to the total cost of care.
By following a patient-centric approach, every segment of the health care system will benefit: patient health improves; payers reduce costs and premiums by becoming more efficient; providers improve the quality and safety of their clinical practice; and industry reduces its financial burden to provide health insurance subsidies to employees.
PATIENT CENTRIC SYSTEMS DELIVER BETTER HEALTH CARE
Wikipedia's definition of the Medical Home
