Skip to main content

Main menu

  • Home
  • Current Issue
  • Content
    • Current Issue
    • Early Access
    • Multimedia
    • Podcast
    • Collections
    • Past Issues
    • Articles by Subject
    • Articles by Type
    • Supplements
    • Plain Language Summaries
    • Calls for Papers
  • Info for
    • Authors
    • Reviewers
    • Job Seekers
    • Media
  • About
    • Annals of Family Medicine
    • Editorial Staff & Boards
    • Sponsoring Organizations
    • Copyrights & Permissions
    • Announcements
  • Engage
    • Engage
    • e-Letters (Comments)
    • Subscribe
    • Podcast
    • E-mail Alerts
    • Journal Club
    • RSS
    • Annals Forum (Archive)
  • Contact
    • Contact Us
  • Careers

User menu

  • My alerts

Search

  • Advanced search
Annals of Family Medicine
  • My alerts
Annals of Family Medicine

Advanced Search

  • Home
  • Current Issue
  • Content
    • Current Issue
    • Early Access
    • Multimedia
    • Podcast
    • Collections
    • Past Issues
    • Articles by Subject
    • Articles by Type
    • Supplements
    • Plain Language Summaries
    • Calls for Papers
  • Info for
    • Authors
    • Reviewers
    • Job Seekers
    • Media
  • About
    • Annals of Family Medicine
    • Editorial Staff & Boards
    • Sponsoring Organizations
    • Copyrights & Permissions
    • Announcements
  • Engage
    • Engage
    • e-Letters (Comments)
    • Subscribe
    • Podcast
    • E-mail Alerts
    • Journal Club
    • RSS
    • Annals Forum (Archive)
  • Contact
    • Contact Us
  • Careers
  • Follow annalsfm on Twitter
  • Visit annalsfm on Facebook
EditorialEditorial

Clinical Population Medicine: Integrating Clinical Medicine and Population Health in Practice

Aaron M. Orkin, Aamir Bharmal, Jenni Cram, Fiona G. Kouyoumdjian, Andrew D. Pinto and Ross Upshur
The Annals of Family Medicine September 2017, 15 (5) 405-409; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1370/afm.2143
Aaron M. Orkin
1Schwartz/Reisman Emergency Medicine Institute, Sinai Health System, Toronto, Ontario
2Division of Clinical Public Health, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario
3Department of Family Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario
MD, MSc, MPH, CCFP(EM), FRCPC
  • Find this author on Google Scholar
  • Find this author on PubMed
  • Search for this author on this site
  • For correspondence: aorkin@gmail.com
Aamir Bharmal
2Division of Clinical Public Health, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario
4Fraser Health Authority, Surrey, British Columbia
MD, MPH, FRCPC
  • Find this author on Google Scholar
  • Find this author on PubMed
  • Search for this author on this site
Jenni Cram
2Division of Clinical Public Health, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario
MD, MPH, CCFP
  • Find this author on Google Scholar
  • Find this author on PubMed
  • Search for this author on this site
Fiona G. Kouyoumdjian
5Department of Family Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario
6Centre for Urban Health Solutions, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, St. Michael’s Hospital, Toronto, Ontario
MD, MPH, PhD, CCFP, FRCPC
  • Find this author on Google Scholar
  • Find this author on PubMed
  • Search for this author on this site
Andrew D. Pinto
2Division of Clinical Public Health, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario
3Department of Family Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario
6Centre for Urban Health Solutions, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, St. Michael’s Hospital, Toronto, Ontario
7Department of Family and Community Medicine, St. Michael’s Hospital, Toronto, Ontario
MD, MSc, CCFP, FRCPC
  • Find this author on Google Scholar
  • Find this author on PubMed
  • Search for this author on this site
Ross Upshur
2Division of Clinical Public Health, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario
8Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute, Sinai Health System, Toronto, Ontario
MD, MA, MSc, CCFP, FRCPC
  • Find this author on Google Scholar
  • Find this author on PubMed
  • Search for this author on this site
  • Article
  • Figures & Data
  • eLetters
  • Info & Metrics
  • PDF
Loading

INTRODUCTION

The integration of clinical care and population health is a priority for health planners, researchers, and practitioners. Health care systems are judged against the Triple Aim challenge to improve patient experience and curtail health care expenditures while improving population health.1 Meanwhile, public health departments and agencies face growing pressures to not only to prevent disease, but to work with health care systems to address growing medical complexity, urgent health inequities, and an aging population.2,3 Planners and policy makers have called for “integrators,” institutions and practitioners equipped to deliver care that meets the needs of both patients and communities.1

Some fear that blending population health with health care institutions and patient care imperatives might divert scarce public health resources into burgeoning clinical budgets. Others argue that attending to population health in clinical settings undermines patient-centered medicine, ushering in an era of rationed, bureaucratic care.4–7

Rather than reciting and weighing these already well-rehearsed arguments, this first virtual issue of Annals of Family Medicine takes a different approach (http://AnnFamMed.org/cgi/collection/clinicalpopulationmedicine). Instead of questioning whether integrators ought to exist, we set out to showcase their successes and unite integrators into a community of practice we call “Clinical Population Medicine” (CPM). CPM is the conscientious, explicit, and judicious application of population health approaches to care for individual patients and design health care systems (Table 1). CPM integrates clinical care and community health by engaging with both patients and populations simultaneously. CPM practitioners are integrators from any existing field of practice, who consider and deliver every aspect of their care for the mutual benefit of individual patients and the prevention and treatment of illness in the entire community. Just like public health institutions work outside the health care sector to improve health, influence the determinants of health, and redress health inequities in municipalities, schools, and the built environment, CPM brings this same approach to health care systems, clinical institutions, and bedside clinical care to improve health and diminish health inequities.

View this table:
  • View inline
  • View popup
Table 1

Clinical Population Medicine (CPM): What it Is and What it Is Not

CLINICAL POPULATION MEDICINE: INTEGRATORS IN PRACTICE

From the 985 papers in the Annals of Family Medicine archives published from 2003, when the journal was established, to May 2016, we identified 127 that fit our definition of CPM (Supplemental Appendix 1, http://www.annfammed.org/content/15/5/405/suppl/DC1). We categorized these papers as they apply to the Centers for Disease Control core functions of public health (health assessment, policy development, and assurance) and the Public Health Agency of Canada’s essential functions of public health (health protection, health promotion, population health assessment, disease and injury prevention, and health surveillance) in clinical settings (Table 2).9–18 We curated this virtual issue by selecting 10 papers to showcase the breadth of CPM practice. These papers might have been developed and presented as research initiatives or commentary, but this virtual issue is an opportunity to consider them together as CPM in practice.

View this table:
  • View inline
  • View popup
Table 2

Characterizing Clinical Population Medicine (CPM) Articles to the CDC Public Health Core Functions and PHAC Essential Functions of Public Health

Health Assessment

Trachtenberg et al used population health assessment approaches to investigate socioeconomic variables and their impact on hospitalization.12 They examined the association between socioeconomic status and respiratory hospitalizations in administrative data, finding that disparities in income could not be explained by differences in demographics, ambulatory care utilization, or physician characteristics. They conclude that policy makers and clinicians must look beyond the health care system and toward the social determinants of health to reduce hospitalizations in the poor. Likewise, Naessens et al used population health assessment to investigate risk factors for persistently high use of the primary care system.11 Their findings suggest that high users have underlying social problems that are not addressed by conventional medical approaches.

Sloane et al and Williamson et al demonstrate the enormous potential of clinical records for health surveillance. Using administrative data, Sloane et al showed that surveillance systems can be built directly within office practice settings to improve both individual patient care and community health.10 Williamson et al validated the use of electronic health record systems for chronic disease surveillance through the Canadian Primary Care Sentinel Surveillance Network.9 In continuing practice, CPM could translate these research findings into ongoing assessment and surveillance systems to guide health care planning and implementation.

Policy Development

We identified several pieces related to policy development, especially efforts to mobilize and evaluate community partnerships to identify and solve health problems. Thom et al conducted a randomized controlled trial demonstrating that an office-based health promotion program involving peer health coaching can extend the capacity of primary care and improve patient outcomes.13 Mainous et al described a community-based intervention led by a department of family medicine to decrease antibiotic self-medication among Latino adults, demonstrating that clinical interventions can play a role in addressing health hazards and affecting the uptake of potentially harmful behaviors.14 These integrators have delivered CPM programs and influenced policies that empower and educate individuals and mobilize communities toward shared health goals. These approaches can address vexing health problems like antibiotic stewardship, where community health benefits can come into conflict with individual patient care. Similarly, Rosenblatt’s commentary urges physicians to use their influence to impact the ecologic determinants of health by shaping community economic activities and influencing policies on reproduction options, locally and globally.15

Assurance

Kiran et al found that a pay-for-performance incentive was costly and did not impact cancer screening rates in Ontario, Canada.16 Roetzheim et al conducted a randomized controlled trial to study the impact of an office-based method to increase cancer screening services for low-income populations.17 They found their office kit and chart organization system improved cancer screening uptake. These findings highlight the value of rigorous program evaluation, as well as targeting interventions to underserved populations.

Jerant et al conducted a study where patient-reported attributes of primary care access were linked to mortality data.18 The authors determined there was an association between the patient-centeredness, comprehensiveness, and accessibility to primary care and lower mortality.

Findings like these can translate directly into systems that drive mortality reductions by linking patients to appropriate health care services.

CLINICAL POPULATION MEDICINE: WHAT IT IS AND WHAT IT IS NOT

CPM brings public health core functions into health care—health assessment, policy, and assurance—often with the deliberate goal of improving health equity. Taken together, the papers in this issue demonstrate that the expertise and innovation exists to integrate clinical care and population health. The papers in this virtual issue show how these promising and important initiatives serve both patient and community health, and are shaping a form of practice that enhances both patient-centered clinical care and population health.

Some might wonder whether clinical population medicine represents a threat to patient-centered clinical care and independent public health agencies, or question CPM as an unwelcome new discipline in the already overspecialized landscape of health professions. There is nothing in the selected papers to support the idea that CPM threatens the values of patient-centered care or the good work of existing public health institutions. Jerant and colleagues provide explicit support for patient-centered care by demonstrating a clear association between the patient-centeredness of medical care and mortality. Other papers in this issue show how CPM practice might augment the core work of public health agencies in areas ranging from chronic disease surveillance to antibiotic stewardship. We see CPM emerging not as a new medical specialty, but as a way of practicing, applicable to any existing health profession or discipline. Though CPM is perhaps most apparent in the ideas presented in a leading primary care journal, we see it thriving in other areas ranging from surgery to radiology, perinatology to palliative care.19–22 The papers in this virtual issue distinguish CPM from conventional clinical practice and the work of existing public health agencies. CPM may share methods with health services research and quality improvement, but is equally distinct from these nonclinical practices. CPM is a way of practicing in medicine and delivering care, but is neither a new medical specialty nor a redundant expression of existing concepts (Table 1).

Whether or not clinical practice and population health ought to be more closely aligned, and whether or not clinical institutions ought to be concerned with population health, the papers in this virtual issue show that numerous integrators are already at work developing initiatives that merge clinical medicine and population health. CPM has moved beyond rhetoric and into practice. The remaining question is how to support and enhance CPM so that serving patients together with communities becomes part of regular practice.

NEXT STEPS

Achieving ongoing effective CPM practice will require leadership with the will and skill to express population health priorities deliberately in health care institutions and practice.

Accountable Care Organizations and emerging Accountable Care Communities in the United States are incentivized to improve the health of the population within their jurisdiction.4,6 Regional health authorities in some Canadian settings include population health and health equity in their mission and vision statements.23 Globally, health services built on the principles of community-oriented primary care draw local epidemiology and community needs into clinical services.24 These are essential steps to define health systems with the impetus and mission to marry clinical practice with population health.

A skilled CPM workforce can emerge only if clinical practice and population health are embedded and integrated deliberately in both clinical and health administrative educational programs. The existing parallel but largely segregated education streams for public health professionals and clinicians cannot achieve this goal. The Lancet Commission on transforming education identified this kind of integrative capacity as a critical gap in existing pedagogy.

Health professionals should be educated to participate in population-centered health systems.25 These professionals must be positioned to lead the implementation of CPM practice within health organizations, ranging from local primary care clinics, to academic hospitals, and up to regional and national health care systems. They must also be supported through a community of practice suited to refine and advance CPM, while making CPM skills and practice available to all patients and institutions. Health care organizations can prompt these innovations by positioning practitioners with CPM skills among their leadership team.

Creating departments of CPM within hospitals and health institutions is an additional opportunity to develop a community of practice among professionals working in this area, and to ensure that CPM capacity is available to serve. CPM leaders can direct the delivery of population-based preventive and health promotion services, to champion population health approaches in health systems design, and to develop intersectoral partnerships for population health.23,26

Conclusions

It is time to move beyond debates about whether clinical practice and population medicine should be more closely aligned. This virtual issue offers a glimpse into the extraordinary opportunities and expertise already available in CPM. The question is not whether CPM should exist, but rather how to create and support the integrator practitioners and institutions that can deliver CPM expertise, and how to use them to serve our patients, health systems, and communities. With the right support and community of practice, CPM can spark innovations and solutions to the urgent problems at the interface of population health and clinical practice.

Acknowledgements

This paper builds on a workshop on clinical population medicine presented at the College of Family Physicians of Canada Family Medicine Forum 2015 in Toronto, Canada. We are grateful to Dr Kate Bingham, Dr Samantha Green, Dr Matthew Hodge, Dr Noah Ivers, Dr Onye Nnorom, Dr Rita McCracken, Dr Danyaall Raza, and Dr Tomislav Svoboda for their contributions to the development of this concept.

Footnotes

  • Conflicts of interest: the authors report none.

  • Funding support: This project received no specific funding. A.M.O. is supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research Fellowship Program, the Schwartz/Reisman Emergency Medicine Institute, and the University of Toronto Department of Family and Community Medicine. A.D.P. is supported as a Clinician-Scientist by the Department of Family and Community Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, the Department of Family and Community Medicine, St. Michael’s Hospital and the Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, St. Michael’s Hospital.

  • Author contributions statement: All authors have contributed to the protocol design and to writing and revising the presented manuscript. All authors have reviewed and approved the final submitted version of the manuscript.

  • Supplementary materials: Available at http://www.AnnFamMed.org/content/15/5/405/suppl/DC1/.

  • Received for publication December 19, 2016.
  • Accepted for publication January 26, 2017.
  • © 2017 Annals of Family Medicine, Inc.

References

  1. ↵
    1. Berwick DM,
    2. Nolan TW,
    3. Whittington J
    . The triple aim: care, health, and cost. Health Aff (Millwood). 2008;27(3):759–769.
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  2. ↵
    1. Tulchinsky TH,
    2. Varavikova EA
    . The New Public Health. Cambridge, MA: Academic Press; 2014.
  3. ↵
    Canada. National Advisory Committee on SARS and Public Health, Naylor CD. Learning from SARS: Renewal of Public Health in Canada : a Report of the National Advisory Committee on SARS and Public Health. National Advisory Committee; 2003.
  4. ↵
    1. Casalino LP,
    2. Erb N,
    3. Joshi MS,
    4. Shortell SM
    . Accountable Care Organizations and Population Health Organizations. J Health Polit Policy Law. 2015;40(4):821–837.
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  5. Canadian Institute of Health Information. Exploring a Population Health Approach in Health System Planning and Decision Making. Ottawa, Canada; 2014.
  6. ↵
    1. Fisher ES,
    2. Corrigan J
    . Accountable health communities: getting there from here. JAMA. 2014;312(20):2093–2094.
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  7. ↵
    1. Brown AD,
    2. Upshur R,
    3. Sullivan TJ
    . Public health and primary care: competition or collaboration? Healthc Pap. 2013;13(3):4–8.
    OpenUrl
  8. Public Health Agency. The Chief Public Health Officer’s Report on The State of Public Health in Canada: The Key Functions of Public Health. Ottawa, Canada; 2008.
  9. ↵
    1. Trachtenberg AJ,
    2. Dik N,
    3. Chateau D,
    4. Katz A
    . Inequities in ambulatory care and the relationship between socioeconomic status and respiratory hospitalizations: a population-based study of a canadian city. Ann Fam Med. 2014;12(5):402–407.
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  10. ↵
    1. Naessens JM,
    2. Baird MA,
    3. Van Houten HK,
    4. Vanness DJ,
    5. Campbell CR
    . Predicting persistently high primary care use. Ann Fam Med. 2005;3(4):324–330.
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  11. ↵
    1. Sloane PD,
    2. MacFarquhar JK,
    3. Sickbert-Bennett E,
    4. et al
    . Syndromic surveillance for emerging infections in office practice using billing data. Ann Fam Med. 2006;4(4):351–358.
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  12. ↵
    1. Williamson T,
    2. Green ME,
    3. Birtwhistle R,
    4. et al
    . Validating the 8 CPCSSN case definitions for chronic disease surveillance in a primary care database of electronic health records. Ann Fam Med. 2014;12(4):367–372.
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  13. ↵
    1. Thom DH,
    2. Ghorob A,
    3. Hessler D,
    4. De Vore D,
    5. Chen E,
    6. Bodenheimer TA
    . Impact of peer health coaching on glycemic control in low-income patients with diabetes: a randomized controlled trial. Ann Fam Med. 2013;11(2):137–144.
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  14. ↵
    1. Mainous AG III.,
    2. Diaz VA,
    3. Carnemolla M
    . A community intervention to decrease antibiotics used for self-medication among Latino adults. Ann Fam Med. 2009;7(6):520–526.
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  15. ↵
    1. Rosenblatt RA
    . Ecological change and the future of the human species: can physicians make a difference? Ann Fam Med. 2005;3(2):173–176.
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  16. ↵
    1. Kiran T,
    2. Wilton AS,
    3. Moineddin R,
    4. Paszat L,
    5. Glazier RH
    . Effect of payment incentives on cancer screening in Ontario primary care. Ann Fam Med. 2014;12(4):317–323.
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  17. ↵
    1. Roetzheim RG,
    2. Christman LK,
    3. Jacobsen PB,
    4. et al
    . A randomized controlled trial to increase cancer screening among attendees of community health centers. Ann Fam Med. 2004;2(4):294–300.
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  18. ↵
    1. Jerant A,
    2. Fenton JJ,
    3. Franks P
    . Primary care attributes and mortality: a national person-level study. Ann Fam Med. 2012;10(1):34–41.
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  19. ↵
    1. Stewart BT,
    2. Tansley G,
    3. Gyedu A,
    4. et al
    . Mapping Population-Level Spatial Access to Essential Surgical Care in Ghana Using Availability of Bellwether Procedures. JAMA Surg. 2016;151(8):e161239.
    OpenUrl
    1. Slater JS,
    2. Parks MJ,
    3. Malone ME,
    4. Henly GA,
    5. Nelson CL
    . Coupling financial incentives with direct mail in population-based practice: a randomized trial of mammography promotion. Health Educ Behav. 2016;44(1): 165–174.
    OpenUrl
    1. Bhutani VK,
    2. Johnson LH,
    3. Jeffrey Mai sels M,
    4. et al
    . Kernicterus: epidemiological strategies for its prevention through systems-based approaches. J Perinatol. 2004;24(10):650–662.
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  20. ↵
    1. Stjernswärd J
    . Palliative care: the public health strategy. J Public Health Policy. 2007;28(1):42–55.
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  21. ↵
    1. Neudorf C
    . Integrating a population health approach into health-care service delivery and decision making. Healthc Manage Forum. 2012;25(3):155–159.
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  22. ↵
    1. Kark SL
    . The Practice of Community-oriented Primary Health Care. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill/Appleton & Lange; 1981.
  23. ↵
    1. Frenk J,
    2. Chen L,
    3. Bhutta ZA,
    4. et al
    . Health professionals for a new century: transforming education to strengthen health systems in an interdependent world. Lancet. 2010;376(9756):1923–1958.
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  24. ↵
    1. Castrucci BC,
    2. Sprague JB
    . The Practical Playbook: Public Health and Primary Care Together. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, USA; 2015.
PreviousNext
Back to top

In this issue

The Annals of Family Medicine: 15 (5)
The Annals of Family Medicine: 15 (5)
Vol. 15, Issue 5
September/October 2017
  • Table of Contents
  • Index by author
  • Back Matter (PDF)
  • Front Matter (PDF)
  • In Brief
Print
Download PDF
Article Alerts
Sign In to Email Alerts with your Email Address
Email Article

Thank you for your interest in spreading the word on Annals of Family Medicine.

NOTE: We only request your email address so that the person you are recommending the page to knows that you wanted them to see it, and that it is not junk mail. We do not capture any email address.

Enter multiple addresses on separate lines or separate them with commas.
Clinical Population Medicine: Integrating Clinical Medicine and Population Health in Practice
(Your Name) has sent you a message from Annals of Family Medicine
(Your Name) thought you would like to see the Annals of Family Medicine web site.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
4 + 16 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.
Citation Tools
Clinical Population Medicine: Integrating Clinical Medicine and Population Health in Practice
Aaron M. Orkin, Aamir Bharmal, Jenni Cram, Fiona G. Kouyoumdjian, Andrew D. Pinto, Ross Upshur
The Annals of Family Medicine Sep 2017, 15 (5) 405-409; DOI: 10.1370/afm.2143

Citation Manager Formats

  • BibTeX
  • Bookends
  • EasyBib
  • EndNote (tagged)
  • EndNote 8 (xml)
  • Medlars
  • Mendeley
  • Papers
  • RefWorks Tagged
  • Ref Manager
  • RIS
  • Zotero
Get Permissions
Share
Clinical Population Medicine: Integrating Clinical Medicine and Population Health in Practice
Aaron M. Orkin, Aamir Bharmal, Jenni Cram, Fiona G. Kouyoumdjian, Andrew D. Pinto, Ross Upshur
The Annals of Family Medicine Sep 2017, 15 (5) 405-409; DOI: 10.1370/afm.2143
Twitter logo Facebook logo Mendeley logo
  • Tweet Widget
  • Facebook Like
  • Google Plus One

Jump to section

  • Article
    • INTRODUCTION
    • CLINICAL POPULATION MEDICINE: INTEGRATORS IN PRACTICE
    • CLINICAL POPULATION MEDICINE: WHAT IT IS AND WHAT IT IS NOT
    • NEXT STEPS
    • Acknowledgements
    • Footnotes
    • References
  • Figures & Data
  • eLetters
  • Info & Metrics
  • PDF

Related Articles

  • PubMed
  • Google Scholar

Cited By...

  • Sante publique clinique, changement climatique et vieillissement
  • Clinical public health, climate change, and aging
  • Employment Interventions in Health Settings: A Systematic Review and Synthesis
  • In This Issue: Tools to Help Focus on What is Valuable
  • Google Scholar

More in this TOC Section

  • Information Technology in Primary Care Screenings: Ready for Prime Time?
  • All Quality Metrics are Wrong; Some Quality Metrics Could Become Useful
  • The AI Moonshot: What We Need and What We Do Not
Show more Editorial

Similar Articles

Subjects

  • Other topics:
    • Clinical population medicine

Content

  • Current Issue
  • Past Issues
  • Early Access
  • Plain-Language Summaries
  • Multimedia
  • Podcast
  • Articles by Type
  • Articles by Subject
  • Supplements
  • Calls for Papers

Info for

  • Authors
  • Reviewers
  • Job Seekers
  • Media

Engage

  • E-mail Alerts
  • e-Letters (Comments)
  • RSS
  • Journal Club
  • Submit a Manuscript
  • Subscribe
  • Family Medicine Careers

About

  • About Us
  • Editorial Board & Staff
  • Sponsoring Organizations
  • Copyrights & Permissions
  • Contact Us
  • eLetter/Comments Policy

© 2025 Annals of Family Medicine