TY - JOUR
T1 - Patient-centered medical home adoption
T2 - Results from aligning forces for quality
AU - McHugh, Megan
AU - Shi, Yunfeng
AU - Ramsay, Patricia P.
AU - Harvey, Jillian B.
AU - Casalino, Lawrence P.
AU - Shortell, Stephen M.
AU - Alexander, Jeffrey A.
PY - 2016
Y1 - 2016
N2 - To improve health care quality within communities, increasing numbers of multistakeholder alliances-groups of payers, purchasers, providers, and consumers-have been created. We used data from two rounds (conducted in July 2007-March 2009 and January 2012- November 2013) of a large nationally representative survey of small and medium-size physician practices. We examined whether the adoption of patient-centered medical home processes spread more rapidly in fourteen Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Aligning Forces for Quality communities, where multistakeholder health care alliances promoted their use, than in other communities. We found no difference in the overall growth of adoption of the processes between the two types of communities. However, improvement on a care coordination subindex was 7.17 percentage points higher in Aligning Forces for Quality communities than in others. Despite the enthusiasm for quality improvement led by multistakeholder alliances, such alliances may not be a panacea for spreading patient-centered medical home processes across a community.
AB - To improve health care quality within communities, increasing numbers of multistakeholder alliances-groups of payers, purchasers, providers, and consumers-have been created. We used data from two rounds (conducted in July 2007-March 2009 and January 2012- November 2013) of a large nationally representative survey of small and medium-size physician practices. We examined whether the adoption of patient-centered medical home processes spread more rapidly in fourteen Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Aligning Forces for Quality communities, where multistakeholder health care alliances promoted their use, than in other communities. We found no difference in the overall growth of adoption of the processes between the two types of communities. However, improvement on a care coordination subindex was 7.17 percentage points higher in Aligning Forces for Quality communities than in others. Despite the enthusiasm for quality improvement led by multistakeholder alliances, such alliances may not be a panacea for spreading patient-centered medical home processes across a community.
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U2 - 10.1377/hlthaff.2015.0495
DO - 10.1377/hlthaff.2015.0495
M3 - Article
C2 - 26733712
AN - SCOPUS:84958163335
SN - 0278-2715
VL - 35
SP - 141
EP - 149
JO - Health Affairs
JF - Health Affairs
IS - 1
ER -