Patient Centered Medical Home - PCMH
Patient-Centered Medical Home
The
Patient Centered Medical Home is a care delivery model whereby patient
treatment is coordinated through their primary care physician to ensure they
receive the necessary care when and where they need it, in a manner they can
understand.
The
objective is to have a centralized setting that facilitates partnerships
between individual patients, and their personal physicians, and when
appropriate, the patient’s family. Care is facilitated by registries,
information technology, health information exchange and other means to assure
that patients get the indicated care when and where they need and want it in a
culturally and linguistically appropriate manner.
Defining the PCMH
The
medical home model holds promise as a way to improve health care in America by
transforming how primary care is organized and delivered. Building on the work
of a large and growing community, the Agency for Healthcare Research and
Quality (AHRQ) defines a medical home not simply as a place but as a model of
the organization of primary care that delivers the core functions of primary
health care.
The
medical home encompasses five functions and attributes:
1.
Comprehensive Care
2.
Patient-Centered
The
primary care medical home provides primary health care that is
relationship-based with an orientation toward the whole person. Partnering with
patients and their families requires understanding and respecting each
patient’s unique needs, culture, values, and preferences. The medical home
practice actively supports patients in learning to manage and organize their
own care at the level the patient chooses. Recognizing that patients and
families are core members of the care team, medical home practices ensure that
they are fully informed partners in establishing care plans.
3.
Coordinated Care
The
primary care medical home coordinates care across all elements of the broader
health care system, including specialty care, hospitals, home health care, and
community services and supports. Such coordination is particularly critical
during transitions between sites of care, such as when patients are being
discharged from the hospital. Medical home practices also excel at building
clear and open communication among patients and families, the medical home, and
members of the broader care team.
4.
Accessible Services
The
primary care medical home delivers accessible services with shorter waiting
times for urgent needs, enhanced in-person hours, around-the-clock telephone or
electronic access to a member of the care team, and alternative methods of
communication such as email and telephone care. The medical home practice is
responsive to patients’ preferences regarding access.
5.Quality
and Safety
The
primary care medical home demonstrates a commitment to quality and quality
improvement by ongoing engagement in activities such as using evidence-based
medicine and clinical decision-support tools to guide shared decision making
with patients and families, engaging in performance measurement and
improvement, measuring and responding to patient experiences and patient
satisfaction, and practicing population health management. Sharing robust
quality and safety data and improvement activities publicly is also an
important marker of a system-level commitment to quality.
AHRQ
recognizes the central role of health IT in successfully operationalizing and
implementing the key features of the medical home. Additionally, AHRQ notes
that building a primary care delivery platform that the Nation can rely on for
accessible, affordable, and high-quality health care will require significant
workforce development and fundamental payment reform.


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