primary care medical home
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2021 ◽  
Vol 57 ◽  
pp. 161-167
Author(s):  
Sheena Yurchak ◽  
Amy Rawlinson ◽  
Jessica Schaub ◽  
Yana Ilin Shpilkerman ◽  
Colleen Makarowski ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
pp. 215013272098503
Author(s):  
Tina Kumra ◽  
Selvi Rajagopal ◽  
Kathleen Johnson ◽  
Lavanya Garnepudi ◽  
Ariella Apfel ◽  
...  

Ideal management of chronic disease includes team based primary care, however primary care medical staff face a lack of training when addressing nutritional counseling and lifestyle prevention. Interactive culinary medicine education has shown to improve knowledge and confidence among medical students. The aim of this study was to determine whether a culinary medicine curriculum delivered to a multidisciplinary team of primary care medical staff and medical students in a community setting would improve self-reported efficacy in nutritional counseling and whether efficacy differed between participant roles. A 4-h interactive workshop that took place within the neighborhood of a primary care medical home was delivered to medical staff and students. Participants completed a voluntary questionnaire before and after the workshop that addressed participants’ attitudes and confidence in providing nutritional counseling to patients. Chi-square tests were run to determine statistically significant associations between role of participant and survey question responses. Sign Rank tests were run to determine if pre-workshop responses differed significantly from post-workshop responses. Thirteen of seventeen responses related to attitudes and efficacy demonstrated significant improvement after the workshop compared with prior to the workshop. Significant differences noted between roles prior to the workshop disappear when asking the same questions after the workshop. Delivery of culinary medicine curricula to a primary care medical home team in a community setting is an innovative opportunity to collaboratively improve nutritional education and counseling in chronic disease prevention.


Autism ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 136236132095396
Author(s):  
Brittany N Hand ◽  
Daniel L Coury ◽  
Susan White ◽  
Amy R Darragh ◽  
Susan Moffatt-Bruce ◽  
...  

While the medical home has proven effective at improving continuity of care among other populations, there is a paucity of literature testing the effectiveness of medical homes in serving the healthcare needs of autistic adults. We conducted a retrospective cohort study to compare the continuity of care of autistic adult patients at a specialized primary care medical home designed to remove barriers to care for autistic adults, called the Center for Autism Services and Transition (CAST), to propensity score matched national samples of autistic adults with private insurance or Medicare. The unadjusted median Bice–Boxerman continuity of care index was 0.6 (interquartile range = 0.4–1.0) for CAST patients, 0.5 (interquartile range = 0.3–1.0) for Medicare beneficiaries, and 0.6 (interquartile range = 0.4–1.0) for privately insured autistic adults. In multivariable models controlling for demographic characteristics, on average, CAST patients had continuity of care indices that were 10% higher than national samples of autistic adult Medicare beneficiaries (p < 0.0001). Continuity of care among CAST patients did not significantly differ from that of the national sample of privately insured autistic adults (p = 0.08). Our findings suggest that medical homes, like CAST, may be a promising solution to improve healthcare delivery for the growing population of autistic adults. Lay abstract There is a nationally recognized need for innovative healthcare delivery models to improve care continuity for autistic adults as they age out of pediatric and into adult healthcare systems. One possible model of care delivery is called the “medical home”. The medical home is not a residential home, but a system where a patient’s healthcare is coordinated through a primary care physician to ensure necessary care is received when and where the patient needs it. We compared the continuity of care among autistic adult patients at a specialized primary care medical home designed to remove barriers to care for autistic adults, called the CAST, to matched national samples of autistic adults with private insurance or Medicare. Continuity of primary care among CAST patients was significantly better than that of matched national samples of autistic adult Medicare beneficiaries and similar to that of privately insured autistic adults. Our findings suggest that medical homes, like CAST, are a promising solution to improve healthcare delivery for the growing population of autistic adults.


Author(s):  
Maria E. Garcia ◽  
Elizabeth L. Goldman ◽  
Marilyn Thomas ◽  
Stephen Chan ◽  
Fumi Mitsuishi ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 100 ◽  
pp. 104124 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rachel Kappel ◽  
Monika Lemke ◽  
Lisa K. Tuchman ◽  
Katherine Deye

2018 ◽  
Vol 36 (7_suppl) ◽  
pp. 45-45
Author(s):  
Elizabeth Hatcher ◽  
Farzana L. Walcott ◽  
Cam Ha ◽  
April Barbour

45 Background: Models for survivorship care are often oncology-based. George Washington (GW) Adult Cancer Survivorship Clinic (ACS) has developed a unique, centralized model for survivorship care delivery staffed by internal medicine providers. The objective is to provide care to survivors that encompass the broad array of chronic issues they face, in addition to guidance on cancer surveillance and prevention. Methods: We implemented a centralized, primary care, consultative model of survivorship care, emphasizing care coordination. A personalized, evidence based survivorship care plan (SCP) is provided to each patient. Patients with complex needs may be seen for follow-up. A copy of the SCP is sent to the patient’s primary care provider (PCP). Referrals are made to our network of specialists within the GW system including: cardiology, neurology, weight management, genetic counseling, dermatology, physical therapy, integrative medicine, psycho-oncology, sexual health, and oncofertility. Referrals are tracked to specialty services using the electronic medical record (EMR). Results: Based on preliminary data, from January 2016 to October 2017, 261 cancer survivors were seen in the survivorship clinic. The majority were breast cancer survivors (166). Referral records were available for 225 patients. Most common were dermatology for baseline skin cancer screening (28%), physical therapy (16%), social work and psycho-oncology (15%), and weight management (15%). Conclusions: Our clinic is based on a primary care medical home model for each survivor, which includes care coordination and referral to specialty services. Limitations include inconsistent referral tracking methods with our EMR and incomplete data for all survivorship patients. Future research plans include assessing the impact of referrals on patient-reported outcomes and morbidity.


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