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EVIDENCE ON THE EFFECTIVENESS OF THE PATIENT-CENTERED MEDICAL HOME ON QUALITY AND COST
The Patient-Centered Medical Home (PCMH) is a model of health care delivery that incorporates the following characteristics associated with better outcomes and lower costs:
According the Center for Evaluative Clinical Sciences at Dartmouth, states in the US that relied more on primary care have:
Barbara Starfield of Johns Hopkins University reviewed dozens of studies, comparing health care in the United States with other countries as well within the U.S., and found that:
• In the United States, an increase of just one primary care physician is associated with 1.44 fewer deaths per 10,000 persons.
A medical home can reduce or even eliminate racial and ethnic disparities in access and quality for insured persons, a new Commonwealth Fund report finds. When adults have a medical home, their access to needed care, receipt of routine preventive screenings, and management of chronic conditions improve substantially.3
The Fund has also found that when primary care physicians in the United States effectively manage care in the office setting, patients with chronic diseases like diabetes, congestive heart failure, and adult asthma have fewer complications, leading to fewer avoidable hospitalizations.4
A research team from RAND and the University of California at Berkeley undertook a rigorous evaluation of care provided according to PCMH principles. For almost 4,000 patients with diabetes, congestive heart failure (CHF), asthma and depression, they found that
The North Carolina Medicaid program enrolls recipients in a network of physician-directed medical homes. A Mercer analysis showed that an upfront $10.2 million investment for North Carolina Community Care operations in SFY04 saved $244 million in overall healthcare costs for the state. Similar results were found in 2005 and 2006.6
The Commonwealth Fund reports that Denmark has organized its entire health care system around patient-centered medical homes, achieving the highest patient satisfaction ratings in the world. Primary care physicians are highly accessible and supported by an outstanding information system that assists them in coordinating care. Among Western nations, Denmark has among the lowest per capita health expenditures and highest primary care rankings.7
THE BOTTOM LINE: Care delivered by primary care physicians in a Patient-Centered Medical Home is consistently associated with better outcomes, reduced mortality, fewer preventable hospital admissions for patients with chronic diseases, lower utilization, improved patient compliance with recommended care, and lower Medicare spending.
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1 Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care, Variation among States in the Management of Severe Chronic Illness, 2006
2 Starfield B. Shi L, and Macinko J., Wagner EH, Austin BT, Davis C, Hindmarsh M, Schaefer J, Bonomi A. Improving chronic illness care: translating evidence into action. Health Aff (Millwood). 2001;20:64-78ions of Primary Care to Health Systems and Health, Millbank Quarterly, 2005;83:457-502; Starfield, presentation to The Commonwealth Fund, Primary Care Roundtable: Strengthening Adult Primary Care: Models and Policy Options, October 3, 2006
3 A. C. Beal, M. M. Doty, S. E. Hernandez, K. K. Shea, and K. Davis, Closing the Divide: How Medical Homes Promote Equity in Health Care: Results From The Commonwealth Fund 2006 Health Care Quality Survey, The Commonwealth Fund, June 2007
4 Commonwealth Fund, Chartbook on Medicare, 2006;
5 A Robert Wood Johnson-funded evaluation of the effectiveness of the Chronic Care Model and the IHI Breakthrough Series Collaborative in improving clinical outcomes and patient satisfaction with care, accessed June 19, 2007 at http://www.rand.org/health/projects/icice/index.html; Higashi, Takahiro, Wenger, Neil S., Adams, John L., Fung, Constance, Roland, Martin, McGlynn, Elizabeth A., Reeves, David, Asch, Steven M., Kerr, Eve A., Shekelle, Paul G. Relationship between Number of Medical Conditions and Quality of Care N Engl J Med 2007 356: 2496-2504
6 Mercer Cost Effectiveness Analysis – AFDC only for Inpatient, Outpatient, ED, Physician Services, Pharmacy, Administrative Costs, Other). From presentation by Dobson, Al, Patient-Centered Primary Care Roundtable, March 12, 2007. Accessed June 24, 2007 at www.patientcenteredprimarycare.org/Meetings/March%202007/March.htmst
ng. $8.1 Milli