• Annals of family medicine · Jul 2020

    Redesigning Primary Care to Address the COVID-19 Pandemic in the Midst of the Pandemic.

    • Alex H Krist, Jennifer E DeVoe, Anthony Cheng, Thomas Ehrlich, and Samuel M Jones.
    • Department of Family Medicine and Population Health, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia ahkrist@vcu.edu.
    • Ann Fam Med. 2020 Jul 1; 18 (4): 349-354.

    AbstractDuring a pandemic, primary care is the first line of defense. It is able to reinforce public health messages, help patients manage at home, and identify those in need of hospital care. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, primary care scrambled to rapidly transform itself and protect clinicians, staff, and patients while remaining connected to patients. Using the established public health framework for addressing a pandemic, we describe the actions primary care needs to take in a pandemic. Recommended actions are based on observed experiences of the authors' primary care practices and networks. Early in the COVID-19 pandemic, tasks focused on promoting physical distancing and encouraging patients with suspected illness or exposure to self-quarantine. Testing was not available and contract tracing was not possible. As the pandemic spread, in-person care was converted to virtual care using telehealth. Practices remained connected to patients using registries to reach out to those at risk for infection, with uncontrolled chronic conditions, or were socially vulnerable. Practices managed most patients with suspected COVID-19 at home. As the pandemic decelerates, practices are now preparing to address the direct and indirect consequences-complications from COVID-19 infections, missed treatment for acute problems, inadequate prevention, uncontrolled chronic disease, mental illness, and greater social needs. Throughout, practices bore tremendous financial burden, laying off staff or even closing at a time when most needed. Primary care must learn from this experience and be ready for the next pandemic. Policymakers and payers cannot fail primary care during their next time of need.© 2020 Annals of Family Medicine, Inc.

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