Launched in 2008 by the Office of the Health Insurance Commissioner, the Care Transformation Collaborative of Rhode Island (CTC) (formerly the R.I. Chronic Care Sustainability Initiative (CSI-RI)) brings together key health care stakeholders to promote care for patients with chronic illnesses through the patient-centered medical home (PCMH) model. CTC-RI began with five pilot sites in 2008, added eight sites in 2010 and another three sites in October 2012. Currently, CTC includes 43 primary care practices with 73 total practice sites, providing more than 320,000 Rhode Islanders with access to a patient centered medical home. Over the next five years, 20 practices will be added each year, with the goal of providing over 500,000 Rhode Islanders with access to a PCMH.
The administration of the project is supported through the Rhode Island Foundation and led by a team from the University of Massachusetts Medical School. Support for the practices comes through the common contract, an agreement negotiated between the health plans and the participating primary care practices under the auspices of OHIC. The contract calls for payments to supplement the traditional fee-for-service structure, providing practices with per member per month payments designed to drive practice transformation and quality improvement. These supplemental payments allow the practices to make structural enhancements, including the addition of a Nurse Care Manager, who oversees care coordination efforts, as well as an analytical structure to use electronic medical records to track patient data. CSI-RI is supported by funding from public and private payers in Rhode Island, along with grant funding from government and non-governmental sources. Click here for more information.
CTC-RI 2014 Annual Report (May 2015)
CSI-RI 2013 Annual Report (May 2014)
More experienced CSI-RI practices saw reduced inpatient hospitalization, while the comparison group (primary care practices that are not CSI-RI patient-centered medical homes) experienced an increase
JAMA Internal Medicine (November 2013)
JAMA Internal Medicine (November 2013)
CSI-RI 2013 Annual Report (May 2014)
practices collectively met every targeted patient heath outcome, including areas of weight management, diabetes, high blood pressure and tobacco cessation, and practices are showing improvement over time in all of the targeted areas
CTC-RI 2014 Annual Report (May 2015)
CSI-RI 2013 Annual Report (May 2014)
CSI-RI practices received increased, positive patient experience ratings, including access to care, communication with their care team, office staff responsiveness, shared decision making, and self-management support
CSI-RI 2013 Annual Report (May 2014):
**Data on the CSI-RI through October 2013