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Roadmap PCMH
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1. The Patient-Centered Medical Home and Health 2.0Beyond the Bricks Jane Sarasohn-Kahn, MA, MHSA
THINK-Health and Health Populi blog
AHRQ 2009 Conference, Bethesda, MD
September 15, 2009
2. Roadmap – PCMH & Health 2.0Beyond the Bricks Setting the context: What are PCMH and H2.0? What’s driving them? Where are we ‘today?’
A view from Dr. Jason Mitchell, AAFP
A view from Dr. Michael Barr, ACP
Reactions from the panelists
Questions, answers, prospects for moving Beyond the Bricks
3. Total U.S. Health Spending in 2007= $2.2 trillion
5. “It Stresses Me Out Too Much To Think About Health Care and Costs”
6. Why We Don’t Get Preventive Care in the U.S.
7. Americans’ Health-Responses to the Economic DownturnAugust 2009In the past 12 months, have you or another family member living in your household…because of the COST? 7
8. The Patient-Centered Medical HomeDefinitions “An approach to providing comprehensive primary care that facilitates partnerships between individual patients, their personal physicians, and the patient’s family”
It started with kids in 1967: first introduced by American Academy of Pediatrics in 1967, expanded in 1992 and 2002.
9. The Patient-Centered Medical HomeDrivers
Enhance access
Build on consumer-driven health and patient satisfaction
Activate patient engagement and whole-person care
Rationalize and coordinate health care processes and utilization
Improve outcomes.
10. Health 2.0Definitions "The use of social software and IT-based tools to promote collaboration between patients, their caregivers, medical professionals, and other stakeholders in health.”1
"New concept of health care wherein all the constituents (patients, physicians, providers, and payers) focus on health care value (outcomes/price) and use competition at the medical condition level over the full cycle of care as the catalyst for improving the safety, efficiency, and quality of health care.”2
11. Health 2.0Drivers Ubiquitous Internet connectivity among health citizens
Universal adoption of mobile phones and ? use of smart phones
> access to health information online
> social networking online overall; health has followed other consumer verticals
> consumer-directed care: >OOP costs drive engagement
> “DIY” care (esp. in recession – remember KFF tracking poll data).
13. The promise of moving beyond the institution for health care Achieving optimal health outcomes is a team sport; patient as engaged player
Enabling technologies are in place: broadband, mobile (mHealth), Internet
Local markets forging ahead…pioneers…
Innovating payment: Kaiser, Geisinger, etc.
Innovating care delivery: Center for Connected Health Cleveland Clinic
The emergence of participatory health care…
Let’s listen…