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Delivering PACT-principled care: are specialty care patients being left behind?
J Gen Intern Med. 2014 Jul; 29 Suppl 2:S695-702.JG

Abstract

BACKGROUND

With the reorganization of primary care into Patient Aligned Care Teams (PACT) teams, the Veteran Affairs Health System (VA) aims to ensure all patients receive care based on patient-centered medical home (PCMH) principles. However, some patients receive the preponderance of care from specialty rather than primary care clinics because of the special nature of their clinical conditions. We examined seven VA (HIV) clinics as a model to test the extent to which such patients receive PCMH-principled care.

OBJECTIVE

To examine the extent to which HIV specialty care in VA conforms to PCMH principles.

DESIGN

Qualitative study.

PARTICIPANTS

Forty-one HIV providers from seven HIV clinics and 20 patients from four of these clinics.

APPROACH

We conducted semi-structured interviews with HIV clinic providers and patients about care practices and adherence to PCMH principles. Using an iterative approach, data was analyzed using both a content analysis and an a priori, PCMH-principled coding strategy.

KEY RESULTS

Patients with HIV receive varying levels of PCMH-principled care across a range of VA HIV clinic structures. The more PCMH-principled HIV clinics largely functioned as PCMHs; patients received integrated, coordinated, comprehensive primary care within a dedicated HIV clinic. In contrast, some clinics were unable to meet the criteria of being a patient's medical home, and instead functioned primarily as a place to receive HIV-related services with limited care coordination. Patients from the less PCMH-principled clinics reported less satisfaction with their care.

CONCLUSIONS

Even in a large, integrated healthcare system, there is wide variation in patients' receipt of PCMH-principled care in specialty care settings. In order to meet the goal of having all patients receiving PCMH-principled care, there needs to be careful consideration of where primary and specialty care services are delivered and coordinated. The best mechanisms for ensuring that patients with complex medical conditions receive PCMH-principled care may need to be tailored to different specialty care contexts.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Center for Healthcare Organization and Implementation Research (CHOIR), ENRM Veterans Hospital, 200 Springs Road, Bedford, MA, 01730, USA, gemmae.fix@va.gov.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Multicenter Study
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

Language

eng

PubMed ID

24715390

Citation

Fix, Gemmae M., et al. "Delivering PACT-principled Care: Are Specialty Care Patients Being Left Behind?" Journal of General Internal Medicine, vol. 29 Suppl 2, 2014, pp. S695-702.
Fix GM, Asch SM, Saifu HN, et al. Delivering PACT-principled care: are specialty care patients being left behind? J Gen Intern Med. 2014;29 Suppl 2:S695-702.
Fix, G. M., Asch, S. M., Saifu, H. N., Fletcher, M. D., Gifford, A. L., & Bokhour, B. G. (2014). Delivering PACT-principled care: are specialty care patients being left behind? Journal of General Internal Medicine, 29 Suppl 2, S695-702. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-013-2677-9
Fix GM, et al. Delivering PACT-principled Care: Are Specialty Care Patients Being Left Behind. J Gen Intern Med. 2014;29 Suppl 2:S695-702. PubMed PMID: 24715390.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Delivering PACT-principled care: are specialty care patients being left behind? AU - Fix,Gemmae M, AU - Asch,Steven M, AU - Saifu,Hemen N, AU - Fletcher,Michael D, AU - Gifford,Allen L, AU - Bokhour,Barbara G, PY - 2014/4/10/entrez PY - 2014/4/10/pubmed PY - 2015/2/20/medline SP - S695 EP - 702 JF - Journal of general internal medicine JO - J Gen Intern Med VL - 29 Suppl 2 N2 - BACKGROUND: With the reorganization of primary care into Patient Aligned Care Teams (PACT) teams, the Veteran Affairs Health System (VA) aims to ensure all patients receive care based on patient-centered medical home (PCMH) principles. However, some patients receive the preponderance of care from specialty rather than primary care clinics because of the special nature of their clinical conditions. We examined seven VA (HIV) clinics as a model to test the extent to which such patients receive PCMH-principled care. OBJECTIVE: To examine the extent to which HIV specialty care in VA conforms to PCMH principles. DESIGN: Qualitative study. PARTICIPANTS: Forty-one HIV providers from seven HIV clinics and 20 patients from four of these clinics. APPROACH: We conducted semi-structured interviews with HIV clinic providers and patients about care practices and adherence to PCMH principles. Using an iterative approach, data was analyzed using both a content analysis and an a priori, PCMH-principled coding strategy. KEY RESULTS: Patients with HIV receive varying levels of PCMH-principled care across a range of VA HIV clinic structures. The more PCMH-principled HIV clinics largely functioned as PCMHs; patients received integrated, coordinated, comprehensive primary care within a dedicated HIV clinic. In contrast, some clinics were unable to meet the criteria of being a patient's medical home, and instead functioned primarily as a place to receive HIV-related services with limited care coordination. Patients from the less PCMH-principled clinics reported less satisfaction with their care. CONCLUSIONS: Even in a large, integrated healthcare system, there is wide variation in patients' receipt of PCMH-principled care in specialty care settings. In order to meet the goal of having all patients receiving PCMH-principled care, there needs to be careful consideration of where primary and specialty care services are delivered and coordinated. The best mechanisms for ensuring that patients with complex medical conditions receive PCMH-principled care may need to be tailored to different specialty care contexts. SN - 1525-1497 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/24715390/Delivering_PACT_principled_care:_are_specialty_care_patients_being_left_behind DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -