The phrase "patient-centered care" is in vogue, but its meaning is poorly understood. This article describes patient-centered care, why it matters, and how policy makers can advance it in practice. Ultimately, patient-centered care is determined by the quality of interactions between patients and clinicians. The evidence shows that patient-centered care improves disease outcomes and quality of life, and that it is critical to addressing racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic disparities in health care and health outcomes. Policy makers need to look beyond such areas as health information technology to shape a coordinated and focused national policy in support of patient-centered care. This policy should help health professionals acquire and maintain skills related to patient-centered care, and it should encourage organizations to cultivate a culture of patient-centeredness.
Growing enthusiasm about patient-centered medical homes, fueled by the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act's emphasis on improved primary care, has intensified interest in how to deliver patientcentered care. Essential to the delivery of such care are patient-centered communication skills. These skills have a positive impact on patient satisfaction, treatment adherence, and self-management. They can be effectively taught at all levels of medical education and to practicing physicians. Yet most physicians receive limited training in communication skills. Policy makers and stakeholders can leverage training grants, payment incentives, certification requirements, and other mechanisms to develop and reward effective patient-centered communication.
Excellence is an art won by training and habituation. We do not act rightly because we have virtue or excellence but rather we have those because we have acted rightly. We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence then is not an act but a habit.
Managed care plans-pressured by a variety of marketplace forces that have been intensifying over the past two years-are making important shifts in their overall business strategy. Plans are moving to offer less restrictive managed care products and product features that respond to consumers' and purchasers' demands for more choice and flexibility. In addition, because consumers and purchasers prefer broad and stable networks that require plans to include rather than exclude providers, plans are seeking less contentious contractual relationships with physicians and hospitals. Finally, to the extent that these changes erode their ability to control costs, plans are shifting from an emphasis only on increasing market share to a renewed emphasis on protecting profitability. Consequently, purchasers and consumers face escalating health care costs under these changing conditions.O n multiple fronts-consumer, purchaser, provider, and regulatory-managed care plans are facing mounting pressures to change. Consumers are becoming more active health care participants and are demanding more choice, greater flexibility, and fewer restrictions on access and service delivery. Employers (purchasers) are demanding less restrictive managed care to appease employees and at least so far have been willing to absorb most of the higher ensuing costs. Consumers' and purchasers' preferences for broad and stable networks give providers the upper hand in contract negotiations with plans. Also tipping the scales in favor of providers is consolidation among both physicians and hospitals and the reappearance of capacity constraints for many hospitals. With their new clout, these providers are pressuring plans to pay more and reduce the scope of risk in risk-contracting arrangements; others are pressuring plans to replace risk payment
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