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Research ArticleOriginal Research

A New Comprehensive Measure of High-Value Aspects of Primary Care

Rebecca S. Etz, Stephen J. Zyzanski, Martha M. Gonzalez, Sarah R. Reves, Jonathan P. O’Neal and Kurt C. Stange
The Annals of Family Medicine May 2019, 17 (3) 221-230; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1370/afm.2393
Rebecca S. Etz
1Larry A. Green Center for the Advancement of Primary Health Care for the Public Good
2Department of Family Medicine and Population Health, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia
PhD
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  • For correspondence: rebecca.etz@vcuhealth.org
Stephen J. Zyzanski
3Center for Community Health Integration, Departments of Family Medicine & Community Health, Population & Quantitative Health Sciences, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio
PhD
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Martha M. Gonzalez
1Larry A. Green Center for the Advancement of Primary Health Care for the Public Good
2Department of Family Medicine and Population Health, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia
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Sarah R. Reves
1Larry A. Green Center for the Advancement of Primary Health Care for the Public Good
2Department of Family Medicine and Population Health, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia
MSN, FNP-C
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Jonathan P. O’Neal
1Larry A. Green Center for the Advancement of Primary Health Care for the Public Good
2Department of Family Medicine and Population Health, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia
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Kurt C. Stange
1Larry A. Green Center for the Advancement of Primary Health Care for the Public Good
3Center for Community Health Integration, Departments of Family Medicine & Community Health, Population & Quantitative Health Sciences, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio
4Departments of General Medical Sciences and Sociology, and Case Comprehensive Cancer Center, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio
MD, PhD
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Abstract

PURPOSE To develop and evaluate a concise measure of primary care that is grounded in the experience of patients, clinicians, and health care payers.

METHODS We asked crowd-sourced samples of 412 patients, 525 primary care clinicians, and 85 health care payers to describe what provides value in primary care, then asked 70 primary care and health services experts in a 2½ day international conference to provide additional insights. A multidisciplinary team conducted a qualitative analysis of the combined data to develop a parsimonious set of patient-reported items. We evaluated items using factor analysis, Rasch modeling, and association analyses among 2 online samples and 4 clinical samples from diverse patient populations.

RESULTS The resulting person-centered primary care measure parsimoniously represents the broad scope of primary care, with 11 domains each represented by a single item: accessibility, advocacy, community context, comprehensiveness, continuity, coordination, family context, goal-oriented care, health promotion, integration, and relationship. Principal axes factor analysis identified a single factor. Factor loadings and corrected item-total correlations were >0.6 in online samples (n = 2,229) and >0.5 in clinical samples (n = 323). Factor scores were fairly normally distributed in online patient samples, and skewed toward higher ratings in point-of-care patient samples. Rasch models showed a broad spread of person and item scores, acceptable item-fit statistics, and little item redundancy. Preliminary concurrent validity analyses supported hypothesized associations.

CONCLUSIONS The person-centered primary care measure reliably, comprehensively, and parsimoniously assesses the aspects of care thought to represent high-value primary care by patients, clinicians, and payers. The measure is ready for further validation and outcome analyses, and for use in focusing attention on what matters about primary care, while reducing measurement burden.

Key words
  • measurement
  • metrics
  • primary care
  • population health
  • quality
  • Received for publication October 23, 2018.
  • Revision received March 18, 2019.
  • Accepted for publication March 21, 2019.
  • © 2019 Annals of Family Medicine, Inc.
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The Annals of Family Medicine: 17 (3)
The Annals of Family Medicine: 17 (3)
Vol. 17, Issue 3
May/June 2019
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A New Comprehensive Measure of High-Value Aspects of Primary Care
Rebecca S. Etz, Stephen J. Zyzanski, Martha M. Gonzalez, Sarah R. Reves, Jonathan P. O’Neal, Kurt C. Stange
The Annals of Family Medicine May 2019, 17 (3) 221-230; DOI: 10.1370/afm.2393

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A New Comprehensive Measure of High-Value Aspects of Primary Care
Rebecca S. Etz, Stephen J. Zyzanski, Martha M. Gonzalez, Sarah R. Reves, Jonathan P. O’Neal, Kurt C. Stange
The Annals of Family Medicine May 2019, 17 (3) 221-230; DOI: 10.1370/afm.2393
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Show more Original Research

Similar Articles

Subjects

  • Methods:
    • Quantitative methods
    • Mixed methods
    • Cross-disciplinary
  • Other research types:
    • Professional practice
  • Core values of primary care:
    • Access
    • Continuity
    • Comprehensiveness
    • Coordination / integration of care
    • Personalized care
    • Relationship
  • Other topics:
    • Patient-centered medical home
    • Patient perspectives

Keywords

  • measurement
  • metrics
  • primary care
  • population health
  • quality

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