Among the report’s findings, approximately 60% of the PCMH evaluations reported decreases in cost of care or use of unnecessary / avoidable services, while approximately 30% reported improvements in population health. Supported by the Milbank Memorial Fund, the report analyzed quantitative outcomes across 20 medical home evaluations from August 2012-2013, including thirteen peer-review and seven industry-generated evaluations.
The report provides results from health plans, integrated health systems, academic medical centers, multi-payer initiatives, the US Military, and the Veterans Administration. The report also highlights the importance of recognizing the foundational role of the PCMH model in strengthening ACOs and the emerging medical neighborhood model, and transitioning the US health care system away from a fee-for-service (FFS) model to one that rewards quality, efficiency, and innovation.
We will also discuss the report's findings during our National Monthly Briefing on Thursday, January 30th at 1pm - 2pm EST. To register, click here.
RT @LarryMcNeely1: Hearing the deets of @CMSinnovates's #healthequity strategy, w 7 different groups....starting Sarah Fogler, whose team… —
1 year 11 months ago
RT @LarryMcNeely1: This afternoon, I'm torn between sessions with @CMSinnovates health equity team AND @MedicareGov staff. Decisions, deci… —
1 year 11 months ago
RT @LarryMcNeely1: Now, jumping over to the @MedicareGov session. Doug Jacobs lifting up health equity plans, language access. At @pcpcc,… —
1 year 11 months ago