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Reflections on The Future of Family Medicine

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Title: Reflections on The Future of Family Medicine


1
  • Reflections on The Future of Family Medicine
  • Daniel Lasser, MD, MPH

2
Counterculture
3
Counterculture
4
Basic values
  • Continuity
  • Comprehensiveness
  • Coordination
  • Common issues
  • Caring
  • Contextual
  • Commitment
  • Community
  • Longitudinal
  • Problem oriented
  • Emphasis on the Dr-patient relationship
  • Response to a public need
  • Service orientation
  • Educational reform

5
Development of Medical SpecialtiesTwo
SeparateTracks
  • Acquisition of
  • information
  • Public perception of lack
  • of access to a personal physician
  • Definition of Primary Care
  • Establishment of teaching programs
  • Reductionism
  • Redefinition into smaller disciplines

6
Imposed from Without
  • The Primary Care Physician
  • First contact medicine
  • Assumes longitudinal responsibility for the
    patient regardless of the presence or absence of
    disease
  • Serves as the integrationist for the patient
  • Alpert, JJ and Charney, E, The Education of
    Physicians
  • for Primary Care. US Dept. of HEW, 1973

7
Imposed from Without
  • Federal funding to medical schools and
    residencies
  • New state-supported medical schools with primary
    care written into mission statements
  • Coincident with other publicly-funded initiatives
    to improve access to care

8
Intellectual Basis of Family Medicine
9
Intellectual Basis of Family Medicine
The Relational Model
Lynn and Joan Carmichael
10
Intellectual Basis of Family Medicine
  • Dont confuse knowledge with information
  • Information changes over time
  • The defining factor for family physicians is
    patient management
  • Managing problems, not diseases
  • Counterculture
  • G. Gayle Stephens, 1975

11
Development of Family Practice Residencies
  • The Model Family Practice Unit

12
Basic values
  • Continuity
  • Comprehensiveness
  • Coordination
  • Common issues
  • Caring
  • Contextual
  • Commitment
  • Community
  • Longitudinal
  • Problem oriented
  • Emphasis on the Dr-patient relationship
  • Response to a public need
  • Service orientation
  • Educational reform

13
Incumbency
14
Incumbency
15
Growth of the Specialty
Source Robert Graham Center
16
Accredited Family Practice Residencies
17
Accredited Family Practice Residencies
18
Accredited Family Practice Residencies
Diversity of Program Types Family Practice
Residency Programs by Structure, 2001-2002
19
Assuming Leadership Roles
  • Within medical schools
  • Family Medicine Departments have focused on the
    process of medical education
  • Early courses have become institutionalized
  • Many Family Physicians provide leadership within
    academic Deans offices
  • Family Practice clerkships are often rated
    highest in the curriculum
  • Within hospitals
  • Credentialing battles are less common than in the
    past
  • Family Physicians are assuming leadership roles

20
Who sees patients in the office?
21
Who sees patients in the office?
Distribution of Office Visits by Physician
Specialty and Professional Identity United
States, 2001
22
Did we improve access to care?
23
Did we improve access to care?
Primary health care professions shortage areas
that would be created by the removal of all
family physicians in 1999
Source Robert Graham Center
24
Did we improve access to care?
Source Robert Graham Center
25
Did we improve access to care?
Source Robert Graham Center
26
Did we improve access to care?
Source Robert Graham Center
27
Are Primary Care Physicians Effective?
28
Are Primary Care Physicians Effective?
  • There is good published evidence to demonstrate
  • First contact Lower costs, more efficient
    specialist utilization better outcomes for
    primary care problems
  • Longitudinal care
  • Better problem and needs recognition
  • More accurate and earlier diagnosis
  • Less Emergency Room use and fewer
    hospitalizations
  • Lower costs
  • Fewer unmet needs
  • Moderate evidence for
  • Fewer prescriptions
  • Higher patient satisfaction

Starfield
29
Are Primary Care Physicians Effective?
  • There is good published evidence to demonstrate
  • Coordination
  • Better incorporation of information when a
    physician is following up after himself or
    herself
  • Better incorporation of information about a
    patient visit to another facility when the
    patient has been referred by a PCP

Starfield
30
Are Primary Care Physicians Effective?
  • Primary Cares Contribution to a Health System
  • Countries with strong primary care systems have
    lower health care costs than those with weaker
    primary care systems
  • States with more primary care resources tend to
    have better health outcomes
  • Primary care availability is positively
    correlated with lower mortality rates, lower
    infant mortality, stroke mortality, and higher
    life expectancy
  • PCPPopulation ratios reduce the rate of
    hospitalization for at least six ambulatory
    care-sensitive conditions
  • Adults with a PCP as their personal physician
    have 1/3 lower costs of care, and are 1/5 less
    likely to die

Starfield
31
Crisis
32
(No Transcript)
33

Problems Within
34
The Model Family Practice Unit
Problems Within
  • Inefficient
  • 15 part-time doctors doing the work of 5
  • Dual mission teaching and clinical service
  • Lacking continuity

35

Problems Within
  • The distinction between Knowledge and
    Information has been difficult to manage
  • Family doctors office designed to provide care
    for brief, acute visits
  • There is an increasing burden of chronic disease
    that is difficult to manage in 10-15 minute time
    slots
  • We vary in our management of conditions

36
Changing Society
  • Use of complimentary and alternative medicine
  • Use of on line health information
  • Over-the-counter availability
  • Role of other primary care clinicians
  • Primary care internists, pediatricians
  • Nurse Practitioners, Physician Assistants
  • Society turns to a 24/7 orientation
  • Information-based economy

37
Changing Society
  • Industrial Economy
  • Top-down management
  • Controlled access to information
  • Limited access
  • Silos
  • Company driven
  • Periodic measurement
  • Constricted flow of data
  • Information Economy
  • Team management
  • Open access to information
  • Open/continuous access
  • Connected
  • Consumer driven
  • Continuous measurement
  • Seamless flow of data

38
Effects of Managed Care
  • Advocacy and Relationship-based care
  • became
  • Agency and Business-based care
  • Increasing complexity of practice

39
Hamster Care
40
Source AAMC Graduation Questionnaire
1990 is estimated
41
Change
42
Change
43
Im leaving you, Mitchell. Youve never had
tunnel vision you never will.
44
The Entire Health Care System is in Crisis
  • Variations
  • There are marked geographic variations in health
    care delivery
  • Discharge rates for Medicare enrollees with COPD
    living in Boston are 2.2 higher than those for
    enrollees in New Haven
  • Overall, discharge rates for medical conditions
    are 60 higher in Boston than in New Haven, and
    are directly related to the supply of hospital
    beds
  • Within Boston, there are considerable differences
    in readmission rates for Medicare beneficiaries
    who were initially hospitalized for one of five
    common indications

45
The Entire Health Care System is in Crisis
  • Medical Errors
  • Health care is dangerous
  • Tens of thousands of Americans die each year from
    errors in their care
  • Hundreds of thousands suffer or barely escape
    from nonfatal injuries that a truly high quality
    health care system would largely prevent
  • 7 of hospital patients experience a serious
    medication error
  • More Americans die from medical errors each year
    than die from motor vehicle crashes or HIV/AIDS
    or Breast Cancer
  • Cost of preventable adverse events is estimated
    to be 17 to 29 billion annually

46
The Entire Health Care System is in Crisis
  • Uninsured
  • 41 million US residents were uninsured for all of
    2001
  • 80 of the uninsured were either employed or had
    an employed parent
  • Nearly 75 million US residents (about 1/3 of the
    non-elderly population) lacked health insurance
    for at least part of 2001-2002
  • About 25 (18 million) lacked coverage throughout
    the period

47
The Entire Health Care System is in Crisis
48
The Entire Health Care System is in Crisis
49
The Entire Health Care System is in Crisis
Infant Mortality For Various OECD Nations,
1980-2000
50
The Institute of Medicine Perspective
  • The American health care delivery system is in
    need of fundamental change. The current care
    systems cannot do the job. Trying harder will
    not work. Changing systems of care will.
  • Primary care is the logical foundation of an
    effective health care system

51
Future of Family Medicine Project
  • Sponsors AAFP, AAFP Foundation, ABFP, ADFM,
    AFPRD, NAPCRG, STFM
  • Three year processes, Five Task Forces, (then a
    sixth focused on reimbursement strategies)
  • Report issued March 30, 2004
  • Issued a commitment to change, based on behalf of
    the public good

52
Future of Family Medicine Project
  • Market Research Revealed Two Major Problems
  • Americans dont understand Family Practice
  • Despite its 30-year history, neither the general
    public nor health care professionals understand
    all that family practice represents.
  • Americans are obsessed with science and
    technology
  • More is better
  • Faster is better
  • Technology is better

53
Future of Family Medicine Project
Market research reveals What do people want
from a Family Doctor?
54
Future of Family Medicine Project
  • What patients want
  • from their Family Doctor
  • First, patients in large urban markets want
  • A physician in their insurance plan
  • A convenient location
  • Availability for an appointment
  • Basic communication skills
  • Age, experience
  • Second, they want
  • A personal physician
  • Someone who will coordinate their care

Market Research, Future of Family Medicine
project, 2003
55
Future of Family Medicine Project
  • What subspecialists see
  • in a Family Doctor
  • Subspecialists see family physicians as a
    distinct group of physicians who
  • Are motivated to serve people
  • Display a humanitarian, empathetic approach to
    health care
  • Are best suited to deliver preventive medicine
  • Are best suited to manage complex patients

Market Research, Future of Family Medicine
project, 2003
56
Future of Family Medicine Project
  • What students and residents see
  • in a Family Doctor
  • Family Medicine is seen positively
  • People-focused, self-confident, intelligent and
    idealistic
  • Offering greater personal satisfaction than other
    specialties
  • Providing two key attractions freedom and
    flexibility
  • It is seen negatively
  • Providing a less preferable lifestyle and more
    limiting opportunities
  • Receiving less compensation, less prestige
  • Coping with health system interference
  • Poorly promoted at medical schools

Market Research, Future of Family Medicine
project, 2003
57
The AAMCs PerspectiveAttributes of the
Successful 21st Century Physician
  • Cost-conscious
  • Quality driven
  • Internet savvy
  • Service oriented
  • Knowledge based
  • Advisor
  • Behavioral coach
  • Team player/leader
  • Coordinator of care
  • Manager of chronic illness(es)

A blueprint for the new primary care physician!
Jordan Cohen, MD
58
Future of Family Medicine Report
  • Six Aims for Care Identical to IOM Aims(Safety,
    Effectiveness, Patient-Centeredness, Timeliness,
    Efficiency, Equity)
  • Ten Rules for Care Identical to IOM Rules
  • Ten major recommendations

59
Future of Family Medicine Report
Recommendations
  • Family Medicine in Academic Health Centers
  • Family Medicine Workforce
  • Communications
  • Leadership and Advocacy
  • New Model
  • EHR
  • Education
  • Lifelong Learning
  • Enhancing the Science of Family Medicine
  • Quality of Care

60
Future of Family Medicine Report
The Challenge Operationalizing The New
Model
61
The New Model
  • Old Paradigm
  • Top-down management
  • Controlled access to information
  • Limited access
  • Silos
  • Company driven
  • Periodic measurement
  • Constricted flow of data
  • New Paradigm
  • Team management
  • Open access to information
  • Open/continuous access
  • Connected
  • Consumer driven
  • Continuous measurement
  • Seamless flow of data

62
The New ModelAccess
We cannot provide effective care for our
patients in office practices where flow was
designed for acute care in brief visits,
scheduled at times weeks in advance
  • The medical office is a bottleneck of episodic
    care
  • which does a poor job of healing and meeting
    peoples needs
  • Joe Sherger
  • The more you can move demand away from office
    visits, the more time youll have to deal with
    patients who really need personal interaction.
  • Donald Berwick

63
The New ModelAccess
We cannot provide effective care for our
patients in office practices where flow was
designed for acute care in brief visits,
scheduled at times weeks in advance
  • Barriers to access vs Open access
  • Synchronous vs Asynchronous
    communication communication
  • Individual oriented vs Population-oriented
  • Individual visits vs Group visits
  • Everyone gets doctor vs Multiple ways to
    time interface with the system

64
The New ModelLongitudinal Management
We cannot provide effective care for chronic
problems with clinical approaches that were
designed for acute problems
  • About 100 million people (40 of population)
    have one or more chronic conditions, accounting
    for more than 2/3 of health care expenditures

65
The New ModelLongitudinal Management
We cannot provide effective care for chronic
problems with clinical approaches that were
designed for acute problems
  • Haphazard vs Planned, systematic
  • Doctor is the main vs Multidisciplinary
    source of care team
  • Office is the primary vs Care across
    settings, source of care clinicians, time
  • Care based on experience vs Disease management
    protocols
  • Individual visits vs Group visits

66
The New Model Information Technology
We cannot deliver effective care without a
robust electronic record, and without a series of
asynchronous communications tools
  • Paper record vs Paperless record
  • Doctors record vs Patients record
  • Control of information vs Open access
    to information
  • Doctor-centered vs Patient-centered

67
The New Model Information Technology
We cannot deliver effective care without a
robust electronic record, and without a series of
asynchronous communications tools
  • Interactive web site
  • Data Lab results, etc
  • Focus on chronic illness care
  • Behavioral coaching
  • Management of minor acute problems

68
The New ModelQuality and Safety
We cannot deliver effective care without
bridging the quality chasm through ongoing
measurement and quality improvement activities
outside the hospital setting
  • Quality assumed vs Quality measured
  • Safety assumed vs Safety built in
  • Experience-based vs Evidence-based
  • Knowledge rules vs Information rules

69
The New ModelLifelong Learning
We cannot deliver effective care without
becoming absolutely clear about the difference
between knowledge and information, and without
becoming masters at accessing, assessing, and
utilizing information
  • Use of knowledge vs Use of information
  • Control of patient vs Management of
    information patient information
  • Learn, then practice vs Lifelong learning

70
The Future Family Doctor
Today Tomorrow
  • Personal care ? Personal population-based care
  • System built for the MD ? System built for the
    patient
  • The doctor controls ? Patient controls clinician
    trusted advisor
  • Defined roles, autonomy ? Interdependent team
    player
  • Hand off to specialists ? Provide Medical Home
    Coordinate all care
  • Care in office ? Care where the problem is
    handled best
  • Care in hospital ? Care where the problem is
    handled best
  • Expert-based practice ? Knowledge
    Information-based practice
  • React to external profiling ? Constant review od
    data and improvement
  • Paid for process ? Paid for results

71
Source AAMC Graduation Questionnaire
1990 is estimated
72
Wise Words from Dee Hock
  • Substance is enduring, form is ephemeral.
    Failure to distinguish clearly between the two
    is ruinous.
  • Success follows those adept at preserving the
    substance of the past by clothing it in the
    forms of the future.
  • Preserve substance modify form know the
    difference.
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