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Saturday, June 19, 2010

Can the Patient Centered Medical Home Save Primary Care?

For years now we’ve been hearing about the trials and tribulations that have evolved in the practice of primary care medicine. However, the discussion has intensified in recent months with passage of national health reform. Recent publications highlight the problems. A paper in the New England Journal of Medicine by Dr.Richard Baron entitled What Keeps Us So Busy in Primary Care?discusses the time spent by primary care doctors on non-visit related work, which according to his findings, interrupts us 43 times daily. Health insurance reimbursement to physicians is “fee for service,” thus leaving all of this work uncompensated. Moreover, health insurance pays better for procedures than it does for talking to patients. These factors have contributed to perverse incentives: “see more patients, run more tests.”


With current relative shortages of primary care physicians, and the anticipation of more patients entering the health system, attracting new physicians to pursue a career in primary care is seen as critically important. However, medical students hesitate to choose it as a career because of its difficult lifestyle, lower remuneration, and the current practice environment. Yesterday I read that HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius announced the release of $250 million in new funding to strengthen the primary care workforce. Of this, $168 million is set aside for training more than 500 new primary care physicians by 2015. That's good news, but who is going to want to pursue this training if the value placed on our time remains so low, and the practice pace remains as hectic as it is today?


What is the answer? There are several current responses to the primary care crisis. On the one hand, the advent of retail clinics and retainer fee medical practices, and on the other hand, the Patient Centered Medical Home model, which has established itself with increasing legitimacy as the best solution. The May issue of Health Affairs was dedicated to “Reinventing Primary Care.” For those of you who have not heard of it, the “Patient Centered Medical Home” (PCMH) is a model of primary care that reorganizes the care team in a way that gets non-physicians more involved, supports patient “activation” toward improved self-care, and uses electronic systems—electronic health records and patient portals—to better manage populations of patients, particularly those with chronic illness. In many ways the Patient Centered Medical Home might really be called the Computer-Centered Medical Home.

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The PCMH addresses the problem of access to primary care and is particularly appealing as a solution within certain segments of the insured population, namely, Medicaid and Medicare. Physicians have increasingly dropped Medicaid because of its very low reimbursement rates. This has made access to care, despite insurance coverage, very difficult. A similar problem may soon exist within the Medicare population, with physicians dropping or capping Medicare patients, if an acceptable solution is not reached with respect to the SGR and Medicare's payments to physicians drops further.


Intrinsic to the PCMH is the concept that primary care should be reimbursed differently. Under this model payment is both fee-for-service and additionally capitated per patient member within the practice. Results of implementation of the PCMH have been published from Group Health Cooperative in Washington and also recently from Medicare's pilots projects. The Group Health results look promising, showing overall cost savings, related to decreased inpatient and emergency room use. However, reports from the large TransforMED pilot, published in the Annals of Family Medicine, are less promising. "Working feverishly, the 36 participating family practices registered only modest improvements in quality-of-care measures but backslid in terms of how patients rated them." The authors of the summary conceded that medical home transformation "requires tremendous effort and motivation," and that most practices would need outside help, as well as adequate compensation, to make the switch."


Simulateous with the PCMH, retainer fee medicine has appeared in many areas of the United States. Similar to the PCMH, retainer fee medicine, also known as “concierge medicine,” provides extra funding to a medical practice in a capitated manner with a per patient annual fee. The difference is that in the PCMH, the hope is that insurers will provide the additional capitated funding. Another key difference is that PCMH designated practices must prove that they deliver certain elements of care to their patients. In fact, to become certified a practice needs to achieve a long and complex set of criteria. The model has been criticized as being “out of reach” for many small practices, who simply cannot afford the additional layer of clinic administration needed to complete the check list.


In contrast to the PCMH standardization, among retainer fee practices there is significant variability in the type of care delivered, the annual fee charged, and the practice's adoption of electronic systems and quality reporting. This type of practice typically emphasizes a more "Marcus Welby" approach, with emphasis placed on personal communication and the traditional doctor-patient relationship. Whereas PCMH practices emphasize care teams with more participation of non-physician members, and may in fact increase the number of patients cared for by each physician, retainer fee practices typically guarantee that they will care for fewer patients per doctor.


As I see it both the PCMH and retainer fee medicine are reasonable solutions to current short-comings. What's wrong with a "Patient-Sponsored Medical Home" practice, structured as a hybrid of these two primary care models, with built in systems to ensure quality, but also structured with the promise of a smaller patient panel for those want a more traditional doctor-patient relationship ? Can the Medical Home have it's cake and eat it too? Or, will it fail to support the personal aspects of the doctor-patient relationship, the value of which is more difficult to measure with quality metrics and clinical outcomes?

3 comments:

  1. I don't believe that the PCMH will solve the primary care crisis (http://www.kevinmd.com/blog/2010/08/americans-doctors-physicians-leaving-primary-care.html). Though I understand the appeal of concierge medicine, this will not solve the primary care crisis on a national level.
    --
    Davis Liu, MD
    Author of Stay Healthy, Live Longer, Spend Wisely: Making Intelligent Choices in America's Healthcare System
    (available in hardcover, Kindle, and iPad / iBooks)
    Website: www.davisliumd.com
    Blog: www.davisliumd.blogspot.com
    Twitter: davisliumd

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  2. David,I enjoyed reading your blog on the medical home model: http://davisliumd.blogspot.com/2010/08/why-solution-to-primary-care-crisis.html. I am curious about your vision: "instead, third party organizations should be accountable for managing chronic conditions and reporting to a patient's primary care doctor if the patient is not compliant with care or not following practice protocols." My view is that third party management (insurance company generated feedback reports) is not very effective in terms of inspiring quality improvement. Most doctors tend to ignore these types of reports unless they themselves generate the reports, or their own health care organization generates them. I guess that I am less pessimistic than you about the future ability of small practices to use electronic records and interconnect in a meaningful way to larger referral centers and specialists. I think that this will come eventually with meaningful use.

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  3. Dr. Liu's choice and organization are a perfectly valid way of approaching the PCMH goals but my impression talking with many physicians is their goal wasn't to "work for the man." Rather, many of them like the independence of private practice. Unfortunately, the independence that existed with the Marcus Welby model has been greatly compromised by encumbering day-to-day medicine with insurance bureaucracy.

    Just last week, I was in the office of one of the mass-market versions of "concierge medicine" that I wrote about in an article published on WashingtonPost.com and TechCrunch. See http://techcrunch.com/2011/06/19/the-most-important-organization-in-silicon-valley-that-no-one-has-heard-about/. While I was there, a new patient signed up for the $49/mth service MedLion provides (no insurance - this is the total fee + $10/visit). He was uninsured as the latest price increase from his Kaiser plan had priced him out of the market. As a middle-aged man with a chronic condition, this model proved critical for him.

    I'm inspired by many organizations such as MedLion looking to rapidly expand their successful model. While the Health Insurance industry has the lowest average industry Net Promoter Score (NPS), orgs such as Qliance have NPS higher than Google or Apple showing you can provide outstanding care at a great price.

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