Patient-centered care innovations by accountable care organizations: Lessons from leaders

Healthc (Amst). 2019 Dec;7(4):S2213-0764(17)30191-4. doi: 10.1016/j.hjdsi.2018.10.002. Epub 2018 Dec 26.

Abstract

Although there is a widespread belief that ACOs must be patient-centered to be successful, evidence to guide them in achieving that goal has been lacking. This case report examines four ACO innovators in patient-centered care that together represent urban, suburban and rural populations with a broad range of economic, racial, ethnic and geographic diversity. Seven patient-centeredness strategies emerged: transform primary care practices into patient-centered medical homes; move upstream to address social and economic issues; use both high-tech and high-touch to identify and engage high-risk patients; practice a whole-person orientation; optimize patient-reported measures; treat patients like valued customers; and incorporate patient voices into governance and operations. Exemplars prioritized direct care interventions perceived as central to financial and clinical success, and organizational maturity played a role. Activities that decreased the traditional system's authority, such as incorporating patient voices, were less popular. Local practice factors were important, and a mixture of mission and margin energized front-line staff in implementing patient-centered care as "the right thing to do." Unresolved questions remain that are related to the impact of individual and multiple interventions and how successful interventions can be disseminated widely. In order for patient-centeredness innovations to enable transformation, providers, payers and policymakers alike must consciously adopt strategies that nurture it.