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1.
Popul Health Manag ; 27(2): 120-127, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38394231

ABSTRACT

Sickle cell disease (SCD) has a history of health inequity, as patients with SCD are primarily Black and often marginalized from the health care system. Although recent health care and treatment advancements have prolonged life expectancy, it may be insufficient to support the complex needs of the growing population of older adults with SCD. This retrospective study used a cohort (N = 812) of Medicare Advantage beneficiaries 45 years and older (ages: 45-54, 55-64, 65-74, 75-89) with SCD to identify associations of SCD-related complications and comorbidities with emergency department (ED) visits, potentially avoidable ED visits, all-cause hospitalization, and potentially avoidable hospitalizations, 2018-2020. The 75-89 age group had lower odds of an ED visit (OR 0.56; 95% CI 0.32-1.00), 65-74 age group had lower odds of an ED visit (OR 0.49; 95% CI 0.31-0.78) and hospitalization (OR 0.50; 95% CI 0.31-0.79), compared with the 45-54 age group. Acute chest syndrome was associated with increased odds of an ED visit (OR 2.02; 95% CI 1.10-3.71), avoidable ED visit (OR 1.87; 95% CI 1.14-3.06), and hospitalization (OR 3.61; 95% CI 2.06-6.31). Pain was associated with increased odds of an ED visit (OR 2.64; 95% CI 1.85-3.76), an avoidable ED visit (OR 3.08; 95% CI 1.90-4.98), hospitalization (OR 1.51; 95% CI 1.02-2.24), and avoidable hospitalization (OR 6.42; 95% CI 1.74-23.74). Older adults with SCD have been living with SCD for decades, often while managing pain crises and complications associated increased incidence of an ED visit and hospitalization. The characteristics and needs of this population must continue to be examined to increase preventative care and reduce costly emergent health care resource utilization.


Subject(s)
Anemia, Sickle Cell , Emergency Service, Hospital , Humans , Aged , United States/epidemiology , Middle Aged , Retrospective Studies , Medicare , Hospitalization , Delivery of Health Care , Pain , Anemia, Sickle Cell/complications , Anemia, Sickle Cell/epidemiology , Anemia, Sickle Cell/therapy
2.
J Pain Symptom Manage ; 67(3): 195-203, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37972717

ABSTRACT

CONTEXT: Faced with a projected shortage of specialized palliative care physicians, scalable palliative solutions are required to better meet the aging population's needs. OBJECTIVES: To determine whether a multi-site, primary care-led, integrated palliative care model improves clinical, utilization, and economic outcomes. METHODS: Propensity score-matched comparison group formed from participants who were Medicare beneficiaries, died January 1, 2021-January 31, 2023, were patients of eight primary care practices that partner with agilon health, and enrolled in palliative care for at least seven days. Each practice operates in a value-based model, where primary care providers (PCPs) take on full-risk for the cost and quality of patient outcomes. Each program includes symptom management, defining goals of care/advance directives, PCP care coordination, and assistance with care transitions if patients enroll in hospice. RESULTS: Final sample included 1778 decedents, with 889 in both enrolled and matched cohorts, average age 83. Palliative care is associated with improved patient outcomes from palliative care enrollment until death, including 5.4 more days at home (p < 0.001), 0.4 fewer hospitalizations (p < 0.001), 17% fewer deaths in a hospital (p < 0.001), and $10,393 lower overall healthcare costs (p < 0.001). CONCLUSION: A primary care-led, integrated approach of delivering palliative care within a full-risk model can be an effective care delivery mechanism to meet the healthcare needs of an aging population by impacting patient outcomes and reducing avoidable utilization and cost at the end of life. These findings demonstrate that PCPs in a scaled, full-risk model can simultaneously improve care for patients while reducing costs to the healthcare system.


Subject(s)
Hospice Care , Palliative Care , Aged , Humans , United States , Aged, 80 and over , Medicare , Hospitalization , Primary Health Care
3.
Health Aff (Millwood) ; 42(7): 899-908, 2023 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37406240

ABSTRACT

Little information exists to inform stakeholders' efforts to screen for, address, and risk-adjust for the health-related social needs (HRSNs) of Medicare Advantage (MA) enrollees, particularly those not dually Medicaid-Medicare eligible and those younger than age sixty-five. HRSNs can include food insecurity, housing instability, transportation issues, and other factors. We examined the prevalence of HRSNs in 2019 among 61,779 enrollees in a large, national MA plan. Although HRSNs were more common among dual-eligible beneficiaries, with 80 percent reporting at least one (average, 2.2 per beneficiary), 48 percent of non-dual-eligible beneficiaries reported one or more, indicating that dual eligibility alone would have inadequately captured HRSN risk. HRSN burden was unequally distributed across multiple beneficiary characteristics, notably with beneficiaries younger than age sixty-five more likely than those ages sixty-five and older to report having an HRSN. We also found that some HRSNs were more strongly associated with hospitalizations, emergency department visits, and physician visits than others. These findings suggest the importance of considering the HRSNs of dual- and non-dual-eligible beneficiaries, as well as those of beneficiaries of all ages, when exploring how to address HRSNs in the MA population.


Subject(s)
Medicare Part C , Humans , Aged , United States , Eligibility Determination , Hospitalization , Prevalence , Transportation , Medicaid
4.
Health Serv Res ; 58(2): 264-270, 2023 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36527443

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To examine whether primary care physician (PCP) comprehensiveness is associated with Medicare beneficiaries' overall rating of care from their PCP and staff. DATA SOURCES: We linked Medicare claims with survey data from Medicare beneficiaries attributed to Comprehensive Primary Care Plus (CPC+) physicians and practices. STUDY DESIGN: We performed regression analyses of the associations between two claims-based measures of PCP comprehensiveness in 2017 and beneficiaries' rating of care from their PCP and practice staff in 2018. DATA COLLECTION/EXTRACTION METHODS: The analytic sample included 6228 beneficiaries cared for by 3898 PCPs. Regressions controlled for beneficiary, physician, practice, and market characteristics. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Beneficiaries with more comprehensive PCPs rated care from their PCP and practice staff higher than did those with less comprehensive PCPs. For each comprehensiveness measure, beneficiaries whose PCP was in the 75th percentile were more likely than beneficiaries whose PCP was in the 25th percentile to rate their care highly (2 percentage point difference, p = 0.02). CONCLUSIONS: Medicare beneficiaries with more comprehensive PCPs rate overall care from their PCPs and staff higher than those with less comprehensive PCPs.


Subject(s)
Medicare , Physicians, Primary Care , Quality of Health Care , Comprehensive Health Care/statistics & numerical data , Quality of Health Care/statistics & numerical data , Patient Satisfaction/statistics & numerical data , Medicare/statistics & numerical data , Physicians, Primary Care/standards , Physicians, Primary Care/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Aged , Primary Health Care/standards , Primary Health Care/statistics & numerical data
5.
J Gen Intern Med ; 37(7): 1713-1721, 2022 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34236603

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services launched the 4-year Comprehensive Primary Care Initiative (CPC Classic) in 2012 and its 5-year successor, CPC Plus (CPC+), in 2017 to test whether improving primary care delivery in five areas-and providing practices with financial and technical support-reduced spending and improved quality. This is the first study to examine long-term effects of a primary care practice transformation model. OBJECTIVE: To test whether long-term primary care transformation-the 4-year CPC Classic and the first 2 years of its successor, CPC+-reduced hospitalizations, emergency department (ED) visits, and spending over 6 years. DESIGN: We used a difference-in-differences analysis to compare outcomes for beneficiaries attributed to CPC Classic practices with outcomes for beneficiaries attributed to comparison practices during the year before and 6 years after CPC Classic began. PARTICIPANTS: The study involved 565,674 Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries attributed to 502 CPC Classic practices and 1,165,284 beneficiaries attributed to 908 comparison practices, with similar beneficiary-, practice-, and market-level characteristics as the CPC Classic practices. INTERVENTIONS: The interventions required primary care practices to improve 5 care areas and supported their transformation with substantially enhanced payment, data feedback, and learning support and, for CPC+, added health information technology support. MAIN MEASURES: Hospitalizations (all-cause), ED visits (outpatient and total), and Medicare Part A and B expenditures. KEY RESULTS: Relative to comparison practices, beneficiaries in intervention practices experienced slower growth in hospitalizations-3.1% less in year 5 and 3.5% less in year 6 (P < 0.01) and roughly 2% (P < 0.1) slower growth each year in total ED visits during years 3 through 6. Medicare Part A and B expenditures (excluding care management fees) did not change appreciably. CONCLUSIONS: The emergence of favorable effects on hospitalizations in years 5 and 6 suggests primary care transformation takes time to translate into lower hospitalizations. Longer tests of models are needed.


Subject(s)
Health Expenditures , Medicare , Aged , Comprehensive Health Care , Fee-for-Service Plans , Humans , Primary Health Care , United States
6.
Health Serv Res ; 56(2): 334-340, 2021 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33197041

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the comparability of commercially available practice site data from SK&A with survey data to understand the implications of using SK&A data for health services research. DATA SOURCES: Responses to the Comprehensive Primary Care Plus (CPC+) Practice Survey and SK&A data. STUDY DESIGN: Comparison of CPC + Practice Survey responses to SK&A information for 2698 primary care practice sites. DATA COLLECTION: CPC + Practice Survey data collected through a web-only survey from April through September 2017, and SK&A data purchased in November 2016. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Information was similar across data sources, although some discrepancies were common. For example, 56% of practice sites had differences in the reported number of practitioners, and larger sites tended to have larger differences. Among practice sites with 1 practitioner in the survey, only 1.3% had a difference of 3 or more practitioners between the data sources, whereas 63% of practice sites with 11 or more practitioners had a difference of 3 or more practitioners. CONCLUSIONS: Discrepancies between data sources could reflect differences of interpretation when defining practice site characteristics, changes over time in those characteristics, or data errors in either SK&A or the survey. Researchers using SK&A data should consider possible ramifications for their studies.


Subject(s)
Internet/statistics & numerical data , Internet/standards , Physicians/statistics & numerical data , Primary Health Care/statistics & numerical data , Humans
7.
Health Serv Res ; 56(3): 371-377, 2021 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33197047

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: To develop two practice-site-level measures of comprehensiveness and examine their associations with patient outcomes, and how their performance differs from physician-level measures. DATA SOURCES: Medicare fee-for-service claims. STUDY DESIGN: We calculated practice-site-level comprehensiveness measures (new problem management and involvement in patient conditions) across 5286 primary care physicians (PCPs) at 1339 practices in the Comprehensive Primary Care initiative evaluation in 2013. We assessed their associations with practices' attributed beneficiaries' 2014 total Medicare expenditures, hospitalization rates, ED visit rates. We also examined variation in PCPs' comprehensiveness across PCPs within practices versus between primary care practices. Finally, we compared associations of practice-site and PCP-level measures with outcomes. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: The measures had good variation across primary care practices, strong validity, and high reliability. Receiving primary care from a practice at the 75th versus 25th percentile on the involvement in patient conditions measure was associated with $21.93 (2.8%) lower total Medicare expenditures per beneficiary per month (P < .01). Receiving primary care from a practice at the 75th versus 25th percentile on the new problem management measure was associated with $14.77 (1.9%) lower total Medicare expenditures per beneficiary per month (P < .05); 8.84 (3.0%) fewer hospitalizations (P < .001), and 21.27 (3.1%) fewer ED visits per thousand beneficiaries per year (P < .01). PCP comprehensiveness varied more within than between practices. CONCLUSIONS: More comprehensive primary care practices had lower Medicare FFS expenditures, hospitalization, and ED visit rates. Both PCP and practice-site level comprehensiveness measures had strong construct and predictive validity; PCP-level measures were more precise.


Subject(s)
Comprehensive Health Care/organization & administration , Health Care Surveys/standards , Medicare/economics , Primary Health Care/organization & administration , Adult , Age Factors , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Comprehensive Health Care/economics , Comprehensive Health Care/standards , Fee-for-Service Plans , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Patient Reported Outcome Measures , Physicians/psychology , Primary Health Care/economics , Primary Health Care/standards , Reproducibility of Results , Sex Factors , Socioeconomic Factors , Surveys and Questionnaires , United States
8.
Health Serv Res ; 55(6): 1003-1012, 2020 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33258126

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To determine the association between a large-scale, multi-payer primary care redesign-the Comprehensive Primary Care (CPC) Initiative-on outpatient emergency department (ED) and urgent care center (UCC) use and to identify the types of visits that drive the overall trends observed. DATA SOURCES: Medicare claims data capturing characteristics and outcomes of 565 674 Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) beneficiaries attributed to 497 CPC practices and 1 165 284 beneficiaries attributed to 908 comparison practices. STUDY DESIGN: We used an adjusted difference-in-differences framework to test the association between CPC and beneficiaries' ED and UCC use from October 2012 through December 2016. Regression models controlled for baseline practice and patient characteristics and practice-level clustering of standard errors. Our key outcomes were all-cause and primary care substitutable (PC substitutable) outpatient ED and UCC visits, and potentially primary care preventable (PPC preventable) ED visits, categorized by the New York University Emergency Department Algorithm. We used a propensity score-matched comparison group of practices that were similar to CPC practices before CPC on multiple dimensions. Both groups of practices had similar growth in ED and UCC visits in the two-year period before CPC. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Comprehensive Primary Care practices had 2% (P = .06) lower growth in all-cause ED visits than comparison practices. They had 3% (P = .02) lower growth in PC substitutable ED visits, driven by lower growth in weekday PC substitutable visits (4%, P = .002). There was 3% (P = .04) lower growth in PPC preventable ED visits with no weekday/nonweekday differential. As expected, our falsification test showed no difference in ED visits for injuries. UCC visits had 9% lower growth for both all-cause (P = .08) and PC substitutable visits (P = .07). CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that greater access to the practice and more effective primary care both contributed to the lower growth in ED and UCC visits during the initiative.


Subject(s)
Ambulatory Care Facilities/statistics & numerical data , Comprehensive Health Care/organization & administration , Emergency Service, Hospital/statistics & numerical data , Patient Acceptance of Health Care/statistics & numerical data , Primary Health Care/organization & administration , Fee-for-Service Plans , Humans , Medicare , United States
9.
Ann Fam Med ; 18(4): 309-317, 2020 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32661031

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Comprehensive Primary Care Plus (CPC+) is the largest test of primary care payment and delivery reform. This program aims to strengthen primary care via enhanced and alternative payment, data feedback, learning, and health information technology support for practice transformation for more than 3,000 practices. We analyzed participation rates and how CPC+ practices differ from other primary care practices in CPC+ regions. METHODS: We assembled a unique data set describing all US primary care practices and compared primary care practices in CPC+ regions, CPC+ applicants, and CPC+ participants. Among CPC+ participants, we compared across 2 model tracks. RESULTS: Of the primary care practices in CPC+ regions, 22% applied for CPC+ and 15% participated. Practices that applied to CPC+ were diverse, but they were generally larger, more sophisticated electronic health record users, more likely to be owned by a hospital or health system, more likely to have experience with transformation efforts, and more likely to be in urban areas than practices that did not apply. Applicants also generally served slightly healthier and more advantaged Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries. Differences between practices that applied but did not join CPC+ and CPC+ participants were smaller yet systematic. CONCLUSIONS: Participants in CPC+ are diverse but not representative of all primary care practices, underscoring the need to further engage practices that are small, independent, in rural areas, and lack experience with practice and payment transformation models, as well as the need to extrapolate evaluation results carefully.


Subject(s)
Comprehensive Health Care/organization & administration , Organizational Innovation , Adult , Decision Making , Fee-for-Service Plans , Female , Health Services Accessibility , Humans , Male , Medicare , Physician-Patient Relations , Program Development , United States
10.
Ann Fam Med ; 18(3): 227-234, 2020 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32393558

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Practices in the 4-year Comprehensive Primary Care (CPC) initiative changed staffing patterns during 2012-2016 to improve care delivery. We sought to characterize these changes and to compare practice patterns with those in similar non-CPC practices in 2016. METHODS: We conducted an online survey among selected US primary care practices. We statistically tested 2012-2016 changes in practice-reported staff composition among 461 CPC practices using 2-tailed t tests. Using logistic regression analysis, we compared differences in staff types between the CPC practices and 358 comparison practices that participated in the survey in 2016. RESULTS: In 2012, most CPC practices reported having physicians (100%), administrative staff (99%), and medical assistants (90%). By 2016, 84% reported having care managers/care coordinators (up from 24% in 2012), and 29% reported having behavioral health professionals, clinical psychologists, or social workers (up from 19% in 2014). There were also smaller increases (of less than 10 percentage points) in the share of practices having pharmacists, nutritionists, registered nurses, quality improvement specialists, and health educators. Larger and system-affiliated practices were more likely to report having care managers/care coordinators and behavioral health professionals. In 2016, relative to comparison practices, CPC practices were more likely to report having various staff types-notably, care managers/care coordinators (84% of CPC vs 36% of comparison practices), behavioral health professionals (29% vs 12%), and pharmacists (18% vs 4%). CONCLUSIONS: During the CPC initiative, CPC practices added different staff types to a fairly traditional staffing model of physicians with medical assistants. They most commonly added care managers/care coordinators and behavioral health staff to support the CPC model and, at the end of CPC, were more likely to have these staff members than comparison practices.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care/organization & administration , Health Personnel/organization & administration , Personnel Staffing and Scheduling/trends , Practice Patterns, Physicians'/trends , Primary Health Care/organization & administration , Delivery of Health Care/standards , Health Care Surveys , Health Personnel/standards , Humans , Logistic Models , Personnel Staffing and Scheduling/standards , Primary Health Care/standards , Professional Role , Quality Improvement , United States
11.
Health Aff (Millwood) ; 39(3): 421-428, 2020 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32119624

ABSTRACT

Providing high-quality primary care is key to improving health care in the United States. The Affordable Care Act sharpened the emerging focus on primary care as a critical lever to use in improving health care delivery, lowering costs, and improving the quality of care. We describe primary care delivery system reform models that were developed and tested over the past decade by the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation-which was created by the Affordable Care Act-and reflect on key lessons and remaining challenges. Considerable progress has been made in understanding how to implement and support different approaches to improving primary care delivery in that decade, though evaluations showed little progress in spending or quality outcomes. This may be because none of the models was able to test substantial increases in primary care payment or strong incentives for other providers to coordinate with primary care to reduce costs and improve quality.


Subject(s)
Medicare , Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act , Aged , Delivery of Health Care , Health Care Reform , Humans , Primary Health Care , United States
12.
Am J Med Qual ; 35(1): 29-36, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30991814

ABSTRACT

The Comprehensive Primary Care (CPC) initiative fueled the emergence of new organizational alliances and financial commitments among payers and primary care practices to use data for performance improvement. In most regions of the country, practices received separate confidential feedback reports of claims-based measures from multiple payers, which varied in content and provided an incomplete picture of a practice's patient panel. Over CPC's last few years, participating payers in several regions resisted the tendency to guard data as a proprietary asset, instead working collaboratively to produce aggregated performance feedback for practices. Aggregating claims data across payers is a potential game changer in improving practice performance because doing so potentially makes the data more accessible, comprehensive, and useful. Understanding lessons learned and key challenges can help other initiatives that are aggregating claims or clinical data across payers for primary care practices or other types of providers.


Subject(s)
Comprehensive Health Care/economics , Fee-for-Service Plans/organization & administration , Patient-Centered Care/economics , Quality of Health Care/organization & administration , Comprehensive Health Care/organization & administration , Humans , Medicare/standards , Primary Health Care/economics , United States
13.
Health Serv Res ; 54(2): 356-366, 2019 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30613955

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To develop claims-based measures of comprehensiveness of primary care physicians (PCPs) and summarize their associations with health care utilization and cost. DATA SOURCES AND STUDY SETTING: A total of 5359 PCPs caring for over 1 million Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries from 1404 practices. STUDY DESIGN: We developed Medicare claims-based measures of physician comprehensiveness (involvement in patient conditions and new problem management) and used a previously developed range of services measure. We analyzed the association of PCPs' comprehensiveness in 2013 with their beneficiaries' emergency department, hospitalizations rates, and ambulatory care-sensitive condition (ACSC) admissions (each per 1000 beneficiaries per year), and Medicare expenditures (per beneficiary per month) in 2014, adjusting for beneficiary, physician, practice, and market characteristics, and clustering. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Each measure varied across PCPs and had low correlation with the other measures-as intended, they capture different aspects of comprehensiveness. For patients whose PCPs' comprehensiveness score was at the 75th vs 25th percentile (more vs less comprehensive), patients had lower service use (P < 0.05) in one or more measures: involvement with patient conditions: total Medicare expenditures, -$17.4 (-2.2 percent); hospitalizations, -5.5 (-1.9 percent); emergency department (ED) visits, -16.3 (-2.4 percent); new problem management: total Medicare expenditures, -$13.3 (-1.7 percent); hospitalizations, -7.0 (-2.4 percent); ED visits, -19.7 (-2.9 percent); range of services: ED visits, -17.1 (-2.5 percent). There were no significant associations between the comprehensiveness measures and ACSC admission rates. CONCLUSIONS: These measures demonstrate strong content and predictive validity and reliability. Medicare beneficiaries of PCPs providing more comprehensive care had lower hospitalization rates, ED visits, and total Medicare expenditures.


Subject(s)
Comprehensive Health Care/statistics & numerical data , Health Expenditures/statistics & numerical data , Physicians, Primary Care/statistics & numerical data , Primary Health Care/statistics & numerical data , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Comprehensive Health Care/economics , Fee-for-Service Plans/statistics & numerical data , Female , Hospitalization/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Insurance Claim Review , Male , Medicare/statistics & numerical data , Office Visits/statistics & numerical data , Patient Acceptance of Health Care/statistics & numerical data , Primary Health Care/economics , Quality Indicators, Health Care , Quality of Health Care/organization & administration , Reproducibility of Results , Residence Characteristics , United States
14.
J Gen Intern Med ; 34(1): 49-57, 2019 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30019124

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Physician burnout is associated with deleterious effects for physicians and their patients and might be exacerbated by practice transformation. OBJECTIVE: Assess the effect of the Comprehensive Primary Care (CPC) initiative on primary care physician experience. DESIGN: Prospective cohort study conducted with about 500 CPC and 900 matched comparison practices. Mail surveys of primary care physicians, selected using cross-sectional stratified random selection 11 months into CPC, and a longitudinal design with sample replacement 44 months into CPC. PARTICIPANTS: Primary care physicians in study practices. INTERVENTION: A multipayer primary care transformation initiative (October 2012-December 2016) that required care delivery changes and provided enhanced payment, data feedback, and learning support. MAIN MEASURES: Burnout, control over work, job satisfaction, likelihood of leaving current practice within 2 years. KEY RESULTS: More than 1000 physicians responded (over 630 of these in CPC practices) in each round (response rates 70-81%, depending on round and research group). Physician experience outcomes were similar for physicians in CPC and comparison practices. About one third of physician respondents in CPC and comparison practices reported high levels of burnout in each round (32 and 29% in 2013 [P = 0.59], and 34 and 36% in 2016 [P = 0.63]). Physicians in CPC and comparison practices reported some to moderate control over work, with an average score from 0.50 to 0.55 out of 1 in 2013 and 2016 (CPC-comparison differences of - 0.04 in 2013 [95% CI - 0.08-0.00, P = 0.07], and - 0.03 in 2016 [95% CI - 0.03-0.02, P = 0.19]). In 2016, roughly three quarters of CPC and comparison physicians were satisfied with their current job (77 and 74%, P = 0.77) and about 15% planned to leave their practice within 2 years (14 and 15%, P = 0.17). CONCLUSIONS: Despite requiring substantial practice transformation, CPC did not affect physician experience. Research should track effects of other transformation initiatives on physicians and test new ways to address burnout. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT02320591.


Subject(s)
Burnout, Professional/epidemiology , Delivery of Health Care/organization & administration , Job Satisfaction , Physicians, Primary Care/organization & administration , Primary Health Care/trends , Workplace/organization & administration , Adult , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Incidence , Male , Middle Aged , Prospective Studies , Surveys and Questionnaires , United States/epidemiology , Young Adult
15.
Am J Manag Care ; 24(12): 607-613, 2018 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30586494

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: To determine how the multipayer Comprehensive Primary Care (CPC) initiative that transformed primary care delivery affected patient experience of Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries. The study examines whether patient experience changed during the 4-year initiative, whether ratings of CPC practices changed relative to ratings of comparison practices, and areas in which practices still have an opportunity to improve patient experience. STUDY DESIGN: Prospective study using 2 cross-sectional samples of more than 25,000 Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries attributed to 490 CPC practices and more than 8000 beneficiaries attributed to 736 comparison practices. METHODS: We analyzed patient experience 8 to 12 months and 45 to 48 months after CPC began, measured using 5 domains of the Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems Clinician and Group survey with Patient-Centered Medical Home items, version 2.0. A regression-adjusted analysis compared differences in the proportion of beneficiaries giving the best responses (and, as a sensitivity test, mean responses) to survey questions over time and between CPC and comparison practices. RESULTS: Patient ratings of care over time were generally comparable for CPC and comparison practices. CPC had favorable effects on measures of follow-up care after hospitalizations and emergency department visits. CONCLUSIONS: Practice transformation did not alter patient experience. The lack of favorable findings raises questions about how future efforts in primary care can succeed in improving patient experience.


Subject(s)
Organizational Innovation , Primary Health Care/organization & administration , Cross-Sectional Studies , Emergency Service, Hospital/statistics & numerical data , Fee-for-Service Plans , Female , Hospitalization/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Male , Medicare , Patient Satisfaction/statistics & numerical data , Prospective Studies , Quality of Health Care/statistics & numerical data , United States
16.
Health Aff (Millwood) ; 37(6): 890-899, 2018 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29791190

ABSTRACT

The Comprehensive Primary Care Initiative (CPC), a health care delivery model developed by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), tested whether multipayer support of 502 primary care practices across the country would improve primary care delivery, improve care quality, or reduce spending. We evaluated the initiative's effects on care delivery and outcomes for fee-for-service Medicare beneficiaries attributed to initiative practices, relative to those attributed to matched comparison practices. CPC practices reported improvements in primary care delivery, including care management for high-risk patients, enhanced access, and improved coordination of care transitions. The initiative slowed growth in emergency department visits by 2 percent in CPC practices, relative to comparison practices. However, it did not reduce Medicare spending enough to cover care management fees or appreciably improve physician or beneficiary experience or practice performance on a limited set of Medicare claims-based quality measures. As CMS and other payers increasingly use alternative payment models that reward quality and value, CPC provides important lessons about supporting practices in transforming care.


Subject(s)
Comprehensive Health Care/organization & administration , Delivery of Health Care/economics , Health Expenditures , Primary Health Care/organization & administration , Quality of Health Care , Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, U.S./organization & administration , Databases, Factual , Emergency Service, Hospital/economics , Emergency Service, Hospital/statistics & numerical data , Female , Humans , Male , Patient-Centered Care/economics , Practice Patterns, Physicians'/economics , Program Evaluation , Regression Analysis , Reimbursement Mechanisms , United States
17.
Health Serv Res ; 53(2): 944-973, 2018 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28295249

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To describe the modified Patient-Centered Medical Home Assessment (M-PCMH-A) survey module developed to track primary care practices' care delivery approaches over time, assess whether its underlying factor structure is reliable, and produce factor scores that provide a more reliable summary measure of the practice's care delivery than would a simple average of question responses. DATA SOURCES/STUDY SETTING: Survey data collected from diverse practices participating in the Comprehensive Primary Care (CPC) initiative in 2012 (n = 497) and 2014 (n = 493) and matched comparison practices in 2014 (n = 423). STUDY DESIGN: Confirmatory factor analysis. DATA COLLECTION: Thirty-eight questions organized in six domains: Access and Continuity of Care, Planned Care for Chronic Conditions and Preventive Care, Risk-Stratified Care Management, Patient and Caregiver Engagement, Coordination of Care across the Medical Neighborhood, and Continuous Data-Driven Improvement. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Confirmatory factor analysis suggested using seven factors (splitting one domain into two), reassigning two questions to different domain factors, and removing one question, resulting in high reliability, construct validity, and stability in all but one factor. The seven factors together formed a single higher-order factor summary measure. Factor scores guard against potential biases from equal weighting. CONCLUSIONS: The M-PCMH-A can validly and reliably track primary care delivery across practices and over time using factors representing seven key components of care as well as an overall score. Researchers should calculate factor loadings for their specific data if possible, but average scores may be suitable if they cannot use factor analysis due to resource or sample constraints.


Subject(s)
Health Care Surveys/methods , Patient-Centered Care/organization & administration , Primary Health Care/organization & administration , Quality of Health Care/organization & administration , Chronic Disease/prevention & control , Chronic Disease/therapy , Continuity of Patient Care/organization & administration , Factor Analysis, Statistical , Health Care Surveys/standards , Health Services Accessibility/organization & administration , Humans , Patient Participation/methods , Patient-Centered Care/standards , Preventive Health Services/organization & administration , Primary Health Care/standards , Psychometrics , Quality Improvement/organization & administration , Reproducibility of Results
18.
J Healthc Qual ; 40(4): 187-193, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28837449

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Performance feedback is central to data-driven models of quality improvement, but the use of claims-based data for feedback has received little attention. PURPOSE: To examine the challenges, uses, and limitations of quarterly Medicare claims-based performance feedback reports generated for practices participating in the Comprehensive Primary Care (CPC) initiative from 2012 to 2015. METHODS: Mixed methods study of nearly 500 CPC practices in seven regions, combining pilot testing; systematic monitoring; surveys; in-depth interviews; user feedback; and input from data feedback team. RESULTS: Designing reports required addressing issues about timing, data completeness and reliability, variations in patient risk across practices, and use of benchmarks and metrics understandable to users. Practices' ability to use reports constructively depended on their experience, analytic resources, expectations, and perceptions about the role of primary care in improving reported outcomes. CONCLUSIONS: Generating claims-based feedback reports that support practices' quality improvement efforts requires a significant investment of analytic expertise, time, resources, continuous improvement, and technical assistance. IMPLICATIONS: Claims-based performance feedback can provide insight into patterns of patients' care across provider settings and opportunities for improvement, but practices need data from other sources to manage patients in real time or assess the short-term effects of specific changes in care delivery.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care/standards , Insurance Claim Review/statistics & numerical data , Medicare/statistics & numerical data , Primary Health Care/statistics & numerical data , Primary Health Care/standards , Quality Improvement/statistics & numerical data , Quality Improvement/standards , Adult , Delivery of Health Care/statistics & numerical data , Feedback , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Reproducibility of Results , United States
19.
Am J Manag Care ; 23(11): 684-689, 2017 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29182352

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Risk-stratified care management is a cornerstone of patient-centered medical home models, but studies on patients' perspectives of care management are scarce. We explored patients' experiences with care management, what they found useful, and what needs improvement. STUDY DESIGN: Semi-structured qualitative telephone interviews. METHODS: We interviewed 43 high-risk patients or their caregivers who were receiving care management from 11 practices in CMS' Comprehensive Primary Care initiative, provided by nurse care managers (9 practices) or the physician (2 [solo] practices). RESULTS: Patients' perceptions of care management were mixed. Patients who had regular contact with, and a desire to work with, their care manager valued the care management services provided. These patients valued care managers who listened to them and explained their conditions and options in lay terms, helped them navigate the healthcare system and community resources, and followed up after hospitalizations. However, one-fifth of the patients in practices that used nurse care managers could not identify their care manager although we: 1) sampled patients who had recent contact with their care manager and 2) defined the care manager's roles and provided examples of typical care management activities. Patients' interactions with care managers from health plans and hospitals contributed to confusion. CONCLUSIONS: Practices can improve patient buy-in for care management through in-person introductions to care managers by their physicians, offering care management to patients who need and are interested in it, broader agreement about terminology and the role of care managers and care plans, and better coordination with care management from insurers and hospitals.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care/organization & administration , Patient Care Management/organization & administration , Patient Satisfaction , Patient-Centered Care/organization & administration , Primary Health Care/organization & administration , Communication , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Nurse's Role , Perception , Qualitative Research , Risk Factors , Socioeconomic Factors , United States
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