MGMA: 70% of Practices at Least Interested in Becoming Patient-Centered Medical Home

Seventy percent of physician practices, both independent and hospital operated, reported already being in the process of becoming or interested in becoming a patient-centered medical home, according to an MGMA news release.

Advertisement

MGMA’s Patient Centered Medical Home Study: 2011 Report based on 2011 Data, conducted in April 2011, captured the views of 341 primary care and multispecialty practices nationwide. Other key findings from their study included the following:

•    More than 20 percent were accredited or recognized as a PCMH by a national organization.
•    The majority of practices interested in becoming a PCMH were family medicine (nearly 36 percent), followed closely by multispecialty practices with primary and specialty care (more than 30 percent) and pediatrics (more than 10 percent).
•    Assigning patients to a primary care clinician is one of the top five most common processes practices engaged in as part of the PCMH model.
•    Establishing care coordination agreements with referral physicians was cited as one of the top five challenges during the transformation period.

Read the MGMA study about patient-centered medical homes.

Related Articles on MGMA:

Implementing ACOs One of Top Challenges for Medical Groups, Survey Finds
Physicians Report Mixed Movement in Compensation in 2010
MGMA Responds to “Biased” ACO Proposed Rule

Advertisement

Next Up in Integration & Physician Issues

Advertisement

Comments are closed.