Situation

In a post-merger environment one hospital exists where two previously functioned.

This provides an opportunity to look at community health, and particularly primary care and treatment of chronic conditions, through a highly integrated lens.

Background

In many communities, underserved populations are cared for in a fragmented and inefficient manner.

The emergency department becomes the default setting for treatment of chronic disease – a costly and clinically ineffective model.

Primary care centers with federal qualifications exist in an independent vacuum and often compete for patients along sociodemographic or regional lines.

Hospital-based primary care centers support teaching programs and outreach efforts.

The point: Everyone operates on different information systems and the collective result can be a highly fragmented care process and a collective set of services operating at a loss financially.

Execution

• The vision was to establish a true integrated system engaging two Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) and the flagship AMC in a joint primary care enterprise focused on collaboration and improving access to services.

• A primary care enterprise was created that bonded the two FQHCs with the AMC to establish a new primary care center and integrated care system.

• A model was established whereby the FQHCs “manage” the primary care offerings for adults and children that support the teaching programs and preserve the FQHC enhanced rate structure.

• Care access was improved through care coordinators and a triage process from ED settings. This enabled patients to become connected with providers and care systems that were better suited to deliver care in more appropriate and patient-focused settings.

• With sponsorship of the AMC, a new and vastly expanded primary care center was created and occupied with services managed by FQHC partners.

Results

The net result was a primary care chassis that now serves as a model for collaboration in efforts like Medicaid population health programs and ensure all providers are aligned and integrated.