Abstract
Disease management is being promulgated by many policy makers, legislators, and a burgeoning new disease management industry as the next major hope, together with information technology and consumer-directed health care, to bring cost containment to runaway costs of health care. Many expect quality improvement as well. The concept is being aggressively marketed to employers, health plans, and government in the wake of managed care’s failure to contain costs. There is widespread confusion, however, about what disease management is and what impact it will have on patients, physicians, and the health care system itself. In this article I give a current snapshot of disease management by briefly addressing (1) its rationale and growth, (2) its track record concerning costs and quality of care, and (3) its impacts on primary care.
- Disease management
- managed care programs
- comprehensive health care
- delivery of health care
- primary health care
Footnotes
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Conflicts of interest: none reported
Adapted from a presentation at the Seventeenth National Conference on Primary Health Care Access, April 8, 2006, Kauai, Hawaii.
- Received for publication April 30, 2006.
- Revision received September 14, 2006.
- Accepted for publication October 10, 2006.
- © 2007 Annals of Family Medicine, Inc.