In order to have an effective healthcare system that is patient centered, care coordination is inherent. This involves significant communication between health professionals, to ensure that quality care is consistently provided to patients. In addition, as care teams strive to make primary care the center for all of a patient’s general needs, further integration may be necessary. With primary care serving as the “hub” for most patients, incorporating facets of other fields is not only plausible but an obvious next step for better coordination.
The PCC has consistently acknowledged the need for an increase in care coordination, and further integration of other fields, such as oral health and behavioral health. The PCC has shown a commitment to further primary care integration by creating the Primary Care and Behavioral Health Integration Workgroup and participating in grants centered around increasing the visibility of oral health in the primary care space.
Title | Source | Date |
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Patient-Centered Medical Homes Reduce Costs | Center for Advancing Health | August 1, 2014 |
Horizon BCBSNJ’s 2013 Study Results Demonstrate Patient-centered Program Improves Patient Care and Lowers Costs | PR Web | July 22, 2014 |
Reform Update: Many dual-eligibles opt out of care coordination | Modern Healthcare | July 22, 2014 |
Medical home missionary sees encouraging cost and quality trends | Modern Healthcare | July 19, 2014 |
Small practices key to CareFirst's medical home success | Modern Healthcare | July 11, 2014 |
New form of U.S. healthcare saves money, improves quality, one insurer finds | Reuters | July 10, 2014 |
Will Health Reform Bring New Role, Respect To Primary Care Physicians? | Kaiser Health News | July 10, 2014 |
Model Suggests Power to Bend the Health Spending Curve | The Commonwealth Fund | July 10, 2014 |
Phoenix Children's and Arizona Blues team up to curb obesity | Modern Healthcare | July 9, 2014 |
Blue Cross CEO: Collaboration at core of integrated care | FierceHealthPayer | July 8, 2014 |