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EditorialEditorial

All Quality Metrics are Wrong; Some Quality Metrics Could Become Useful

Michael E. Johansen, Andrew S. Detty and Jonathan Doo Young Yun
The Annals of Family Medicine March 2025, 23 (2) 91-92; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1370/afm.250087
Michael E. Johansen
Grant Family Medicine, OhioHealth, Columbus, Ohio
MD, MS
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  • For correspondence: mikejoha3@gmail.com
Andrew S. Detty
Grant Family Medicine, OhioHealth, Columbus, Ohio
MD
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Jonathan Doo Young Yun
Grant Family Medicine, OhioHealth, Columbus, Ohio
MD, MPH
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    Editorial 

     All Quality Metrics Are Wrong; Some Quality Metrics Could Become Useful

    Background: This editorial builds on a study by Brulin and Teoh, released ahead of the March/April 2025 issue of Annals of Family Medicine, which found that performance-based reimbursement is associated with lower perceived quality of care by increasing illegitimate tasks and moral distress for primary care physicians. Despite past evaluations showing mediocre results, pay-for-performance quality metrics have proliferated, supported by multiple levels of government.

    Editorial Stance: Quality metrics and pay-for-performance initiatives are far more expensive than many patients, clinicians, or administrators realize, prompting a reevaluation of the pay-for-quality approach in primary care. The authors call for more rigorous review—through cluster randomized controlled trials—both before and after implementation, and for prompt de-implementation of metrics with little impact or that detract from care. They recommend refocusing incentives on targets that are impactful, time limited, low cost, and physician controlled. Otherwise, pay-for-performance risks continuing to add administrative burdens and unrecognized costs that further degrade the value of primary care.

    Why It Matters: The article’s title—“All Quality Metrics Are Wrong; Some Quality Metrics Could Become Useful”—highlights that while no single metric is perfect, some can support better care if applied thoughtfully and tested in real-world settings. Overall, the authors advocate aligning pay-for-performance with realistic clinician workflows and meaningful outcomes, rather than relying on a one-size-fits-all model that can distort clinical priorities and patient care.

    All Quality Metrics Are Wrong; Some Quality Metrics Could Become Useful

    Michael E. Johansen, MD, MS, et al 

    Grant Family Medicine, OhioHealth, Columbus, Ohio

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The Annals of Family Medicine: 23 (2)
The Annals of Family Medicine: 23 (2)
Vol. 23, Issue 2
Mar/April 2025
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All Quality Metrics are Wrong; Some Quality Metrics Could Become Useful
Michael E. Johansen, Andrew S. Detty, Jonathan Doo Young Yun
The Annals of Family Medicine Mar 2025, 23 (2) 91-92; DOI: 10.1370/afm.250087

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All Quality Metrics are Wrong; Some Quality Metrics Could Become Useful
Michael E. Johansen, Andrew S. Detty, Jonathan Doo Young Yun
The Annals of Family Medicine Mar 2025, 23 (2) 91-92; DOI: 10.1370/afm.250087
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