Survey Highlights What Enables Primary Care Physicians to Actively Participate in Value-Based Care
What’s Trending: Alignment and Advanced Practice Infrastructure Are Key for Success in Value-Based Primary Care
While value-based care has become a well-recognized way to align economic interests with activities that should improve patient outcomes and reduce unnecessary spending, ensuring that physicians can deliver against a value-based care mandate is another matter.
Despite the proliferation of activity, existing research is hazy at best in answering critical questions around characteristics, behavior, and infrastructure of established and aspiring value-based practices. To capture what enables primary care providers to deliver against their mandate, we conducted a national survey of over 300 primary care physicians (PCPs) across the United States to shine light on current practices and anticipated trends in the value-based care space.
WHY IT MATTERS:
In our national value-based care survey , we analyzed and segmented the PCP landscape into 3 cohorts to understand how the degree of alignment to value-based care affects their practice, decision-making, and competencies.
Key findings from the analysis include:
While value-based care models are prevalent, those that involve explicit risk-taking are less so.
PCPs who are more aligned to value-based care have more advanced practice infrastructure to support them, with a clear distinction among cohorts.
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PCP workload, time allocation, and satisfaction are affected by the level of alignment to value-based care.
WHAT'S NEXT:
Healthcare organizations looking to participate in value-based care must do so meaningfully and with intention, or they risk being ineffective and eroding the professional satisfaction of their PCPs as a result.
Commensurate with a commitment to value-based care is the mandate to invest in the capabilities required to deliver on it. Capabilities include notification or reporting on care outside of the practice, adjacent or on-site clinical services, and support tools for risk identification and stratification, among others.
Additionally, as the presence of value-based primary care continues to expand, the Leader archetype will be increasingly favored. Accordingly, Experimenters and Abstainers have an opportunity to align the characteristics of their practices more closely to those of Leaders in this high-growth sector. And the evidence seems to support that greater infrastructure at value-aligned practices translates to reduced workload and improved job satisfaction.
When executed well, the expansion of value-based care can improve quality of care, decrease spending, and increase satisfaction among patients and providers alike. But the key will be ensuring appropriate communication, alignment, and advanced practice capabilities that enable physicians to successfully practice in this environment.
For more detailed data and analysis on current practices and anticipated trends in value-based care, click through to our national survey.
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