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Erschienen in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 7/2016

29.12.2015 | Original Research

Cost of Transformation among Primary Care Practices Participating in a Medical Home Pilot

verfasst von: Grant R. Martsolf, PhD, MPH, RN, Ryan Kandrack, BS, Robert A. Gabbay, MD, PhD, Mark W. Friedberg, MD, MPP

Erschienen in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Ausgabe 7/2016

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Abstract

Background

Medical home initiatives encourage primary care practices to invest in new structural capabilities such as patient registries and information technology, but little is known about the costs of these investments.

Objectives

To estimate costs of transformation incurred by primary care practices participating in a medical home pilot.

Design

We interviewed practice leaders in order to identify changes practices had undertaken due to medical home transformation. Based on the principles of activity-based costing, we estimated the costs of additional personnel and other investments associated with these changes.

Setting

The Pennsylvania Chronic Care Initiative (PACCI), a statewide multi-payer medical home pilot.

Participants

Twelve practices that participated in the PACCI.

Measurements

One-time and ongoing yearly costs attributed to medical home transformation.

Results

Practices incurred median one-time transformation-associated costs of $30,991 per practice (range, $7694 to $117,810), equivalent to $9814 per clinician ($1497 to $57,476) and $8 per patient ($1 to $30). Median ongoing yearly costs associated with transformation were $147,573 per practice (range, $83,829 to $346,603), equivalent to $64,768 per clinician ($18,585 to $93,856) and $30 per patient ($8 to $136). Care management activities accounted for over 60% of practices’ transformation-associated costs. Per-clinician and per-patient transformation costs were greater for small and independent practices than for large and system-affiliated practices.

Limitations

Error in interviewee recall could affect estimates. Transformation costs in other medical home interventions may be different.

Conclusions

The costs of medical home transformation vary widely, creating potential financial challenges for primary care practices—especially those that are small and independent. Tailored subsidies from payers may help practices make these investments.

Primary Funding Source

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
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Metadaten
Titel
Cost of Transformation among Primary Care Practices Participating in a Medical Home Pilot
verfasst von
Grant R. Martsolf, PhD, MPH, RN
Ryan Kandrack, BS
Robert A. Gabbay, MD, PhD
Mark W. Friedberg, MD, MPP
Publikationsdatum
29.12.2015
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Ausgabe 7/2016
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Elektronische ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-015-3553-6

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