The Coming Primary Care Revolution
- PMID: 28243869
- PMCID: PMC5377886
- DOI: 10.1007/s11606-016-3944-3
The Coming Primary Care Revolution
Abstract
The United States has the most expensive, technologically advanced, and sub-specialized healthcare system in the world, yet it has worse population health status than any other high-income country. Rising healthcare costs, high rates of waste, the continued trend towards chronic non-communicable disease, and the growth of new market entrants that compete with primary care services have set the stage for fundamental change in all of healthcare, driven by a revolution in primary care. We believe that the coming primary care revolution ought to be guided by the following design principles: 1) Payment must adequately support primary care and reward value, including non-visit-based care. 2) Relationships will serve as the bedrock of value in primary care, and will increasingly be fostered by teams, improved clinical operations, and technology, with patients and non-physicians assuming an ever-increasing role in most aspects of healthcare. 3) Generalist physicians will increasingly focus on high-acuity and high-complexity presentations, and primary care teams will increasingly manage conditions that specialists managed in the past. 4) Primary care will refocus on whole-person care, and address health behaviors as well as vision, hearing, dental, and social services. Design based on these principles should lead to higher-value healthcare, but will require new approaches to workforce training.
Keywords: care delivery innovation; health workforce; healthcare systems; primary care; value-based care.
Conflict of interest statement
Dr. Ellner is the cofounder of Firefly Health, a for-profit, primary care service and technology company.
Dr. Phillips has no potential conflicts of interest to report. In addition to his role as director at the Center for Primary Care, Dr. Phillips serves as an advisor to CareMessage, a non-profit start-up organization that uses information technology to support the efforts of healthcare organizations to simplify care management.
Comment in
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What's in a Name? : Is it time to retire the term "Primary Care Physician"?J Gen Intern Med. 2017 Sep;32(9):957-958. doi: 10.1007/s11606-017-4118-7. J Gen Intern Med. 2017. PMID: 28685483 Free PMC article. No abstract available.
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