1. Expectations outpace reality: physicians' use of care management tools for patients with chronic conditions.
- Author
-
Carrier E and Reschovsky J
- Subjects
- Asthma therapy, Chronic Disease economics, Community Networks, Depression therapy, Diabetes Mellitus therapy, Diffusion of Innovation, Economics, Medical organization & administration, Group Practice organization & administration, Health Care Surveys, Health Facility Size, Health Policy, Heart Failure therapy, Humans, Insurance, Health, Reimbursement, Medical Records Systems, Computerized statistics & numerical data, Organizational Culture, Patient Care Management economics, Patient Education as Topic organization & administration, Physician Incentive Plans, Practice Patterns, Physicians', Private Practice organization & administration, Quality of Health Care, Registries, Reminder Systems statistics & numerical data, United States, Chronic Disease therapy, Family Practice organization & administration, Health Resources statistics & numerical data, Medicine organization & administration, Nurse Administrators statistics & numerical data, Patient Care Management statistics & numerical data, Practice Management, Medical organization & administration, Preventive Health Services statistics & numerical data, Primary Health Care organization & administration
- Abstract
Use of care management tools--such as group visits or patient registries--varies widely among primary care physicians whose practices care for patients with four common chronic conditions--asthma, diabetes, congestive heart failure and depression--according to a new national study by the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC). For example, less than a third of these primary care physicians in 2008 reported their practices use nurse managers to coordinate care, and only four in 10 were in practices using registries to keep track of patients with chronic conditions. Physicians also used care management tools for patients with some chronic conditions but not others. Practice size and setting were strongly related to the likelihood that physicians used care management tools, with solo and smaller group practices least likely to use care management tools. The findings suggest that, along with experimenting with financial incentives for primary care physicians to adopt care management tools, policy makers might consider developing community-level care management resources, such as nurse managers, that could be shared among smaller physician practices.
- Published
- 2009