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Annals of family medicine · Mar 2015
Recommendations for a mixed methods approach to evaluating the patient-centered medical home.
- Roberta E Goldman, Donna R Parker, Joanna Brown, Judith Walker, Charles B Eaton, and Jeffrey M Borkan.
- Department of Family Medicine, The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island Roberta_Goldman@brown.edu.
- Ann Fam Med. 2015 Mar 1; 13 (2): 168175168-75.
PurposeThere is a strong push in the United States to evaluate whether the patient-centered medical home (PCMH) model produces desired results. The explanatory and contextually based questions of how and why PCMH succeeds in different practice settings are often neglected. We report the development of a comprehensive, mixed qualitative-quantitative evaluation set for researchers, policy makers, and clinician groups.MethodsTo develop an evaluation set, the Brown Primary Care Transformation Initiative convened a multidisciplinary group of PCMH experts, reviewed the PCMH literature and evaluation strategies, developed key domains for evaluation, and selected or created methods and measures for inclusion.ResultsThe measures and methods in the evaluation set (survey instruments, PCMH meta-measures, patient outcomes, quality measures, qualitative interviews, participant observation, and process evaluation) are meant to be used together. PCMH evaluation must be sufficiently comprehensive to assess and explain both the context of transformation in different primary care practices and the experiences of diverse stakeholders. In addition to commonly assessed patient outcomes, quality, and cost, it is critical to include PCMH components integral to practice culture transformation: patient and family centeredness, authentic patient activation, mutual trust among practice employees and patients, and transparency, joy, and collaboration in delivering and receiving care in a changing environment.ConclusionsThis evaluation set offers a comprehensive methodology to enable understanding of how PCMH transformation occurs in different practice settings. This approach can foster insights about how transformation affects critical outcomes to achieve meaningful, patient-centered, high-quality, and cost-effective sustainable change among diverse primary care practices.© 2015 Annals of Family Medicine, Inc.
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