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
Research ArticleFamily Medicine UpdatesF

FROM ADFM: AMPLIFYING ADVOCACY IN FAMILY MEDICINE

Cynthia Haq, Wayne Altman, Elisabeth Wilson, Tochi Iroku-Malize, Reid Blackwelder and Jehni Robinson
The Annals of Family Medicine November 2021, 19 (6) 569-570; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1370/afm.2594
Cynthia Haq
MD
  • Find this author on Google Scholar
  • Find this author on PubMed
  • Search for this author on this site
Wayne Altman
MD
  • Find this author on Google Scholar
  • Find this author on PubMed
  • Search for this author on this site
Elisabeth Wilson
MD
  • Find this author on Google Scholar
  • Find this author on PubMed
  • Search for this author on this site
Tochi Iroku-Malize
MD
  • Find this author on Google Scholar
  • Find this author on PubMed
  • Search for this author on this site
Reid Blackwelder
MD
  • Find this author on Google Scholar
  • Find this author on PubMed
  • Search for this author on this site
Jehni Robinson
MD
  • Find this author on Google Scholar
  • Find this author on PubMed
  • Search for this author on this site

Family physicians provided primary health care for patients, families, and communities despite great risks to themselves and their loved ones throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. Our comprehensive scope of practice provides us with unique perspectives regarding the basic conditions needed for all people to thrive such as safety, shelter, education, recreation, social support, access to healthy food, and primary health care. The pandemic or more appropriately, the syndemic, has revealed gaps and amplified health inequities within our nation and the world.1 Despite spending more money on health care than any other nation, the health of the US population lags behind most in other high-income nations.2–3

The challenge to address disparities and strive for health equity motivated the Association of Departments of Family Medicine (ADFM) to launch a new Advocacy Committee. Family Medicine (FM) advocacy encompasses actions inspired by our experiences to promote individual, health system, social, economic, educational, and/or political changes that promote human health and well-being.4 Advocacy actions can occur at the micro (clinical environment), meso (local community), or macro (national or global) policy level.5 Effective advocacy includes identifying the problem; gathering information; committing to action; collaborating with others; mobilizing resources; and sustaining efforts to bring about change. Family physicians are natural advocates for their patients, although many have never been trained and may not be comfortable with all levels of advocacy. The aims of the ADFM Advocacy Committee are to (1) identify opportunities for advocacy; (2) amplify the voice of family physicians; (3) support FM department advocacy efforts; and (4) identify and share advocacy resources.

For example, family physicians can promote the recent National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (NASEM) report that calls for widespread changes in the US health care system to support primary care as a common good.6 The report includes 5 aims:

  1. Pay for primary care teams to care for people, not doctors to deliver services

  2. Ensure primary care is available to every individual and community

  3. Train primary care teams where people live and work

  4. Design information technology that serves the patient, family, and the interprofessional care team

  5. Ensure high-quality primary care is implemented throughout the United States

Family physicians can engage with local and state legislators to support the first aim. Many states have introduced legislation to increase funding for primary care, also supported by the Primary Care Collaborative (PCC).7 In some cases, legislation starts with establishing a clear definition of primary care and measuring the percentage of total medical expenditures allocated to primary care. The NASEM report recommends increasing primary care support and shifting from fee-for-service to global payments.

The NASEM report calls for appropriate regulatory and legislative rules to ensure safe, ethical, and anti-racist application of new technologies, along with appropriate reimbursement to support the patient-physician relationship. Electronic health records (EHRs) have been both an ally and an albatross for practicing physicians.8 EHR implementation was designed to improve the quality of care, but the lack of interoperability has created a number of problems.9 The promise of health care portals for patients to access their own information is often thwarted by difficulties with access and navigability. AAFP has supported efforts to make IT more accessible and affordable to PCPs, protect patient privacy, and ensure standards and protocols that allow health care information to flow between physicians, payers, patients, and pharmacies.10 Other advocacy efforts have included automating prior authorizations and monitoring the impact of telehealth on access and equity. Family physicians can contribute to the development of new technologies such as artificial intelligence or advanced learning systems to strengthen primary care.11

We continue to endure a syndemic that affects us profoundly in terms of health, social connections, and economics. COVID-19 disparities, the Black Lives Matter movement, police violence, and climate change have deepened our understanding of the extreme health and social inequities that disproportionately affect disadvantaged individuals and communities. The NASEM report describing primary care as a public good emphasizes the need for family physicians to respond with coordinated and thoughtful advocacy efforts that can dramatically change investment in primary care and demonstrate our commitment to social justice and health equity. These events present a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for fundamental changes.

Family physicians are accountable to serve the needs of both our patients and our communities. Yet many patient’s needs are not within the health sector, and few family physicians have had formal advocacy training. Fortunately, the AAFP,12 STFM,13 and others have recognized these needs and developed programs and coalitions to facilitate advocacy training and actions. We call on family physicians, departments of family medicine, and family medicine organizations to consider advocacy as a professional responsibility and to train the next generation of family physician advocates. Select an issue important to your patients and community, support and reward engagement, and join the growing ranks of family physician advocates working to strengthen primary care and promote better health for our patients, communities, and the world.

Acknowledgments

Thank you to additional ADFM Advocacy Committee Members for their contributions. Jacob Prunuske, Hope Wittenberg, Michelle Roett, Steven K Rothschild, Elissa Palmer, Joseph Gravel, Allen Perkins, Jennifer Edgoose, Amanda Weidner, Sam Elwood, and Jessie Vera.

  • © 2021 Annals of Family Medicine, Inc.

References

  1. 1.
    1. Syndemics: health in context
    . The Lancet. 2017;389(10072):881. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(17)30640-2
  2. 2.
    1. Kamal R
    . How does health spending in the U.S. compare to other countries? Peterson-KFF Health System Tracker. Published Jan 4, 2021. Accessed Aug 31, 2021. https://www.healthsystemtracker.org/chart-collection/health-spending-u-s-compare-countries/#item-start
  3. 3.
    1. Arias E,
    2. Tejada-Vera B,
    3. Ahmad F,
    4. Kochanek KD
    . Provisional Life Expectancy Estimates for 2020. Vital Statistics Rapid Release; no 15. National Center for Health Statistics; 2021. doi:10.15620/cdc:107201
  4. 4.
    1. Earnest MA,
    2. Wong SL,
    3. Federico SG
    . Perspective: physician advocacy: what is it and how do we do it? Acad Med.2010;85(1):63–67.
  5. 5.
    1. Buchman S,
    2. Woollard R,
    3. Meili R,
    4. Goel R
    . Practicing social accountability. Can Fam Phys.2016;62(1):15–18.
  6. 6.
    1. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine 2021
    . Implementing High-Quality Primary Care: Rebuilding the Foundation of Health Care. The National Academies Press; 2021. doi:10.17226/25983
  7. 7.
    1. Primary care collaborative
    . Published Sep 8, 2021. Accessed Sep 31, 2021. https://www.pcpcc.org/about
  8. 8.
    1. Poon EG,
    2. Trent Rosenbloom S,
    3. Zheng K
    . Health information technology and clinician burnout: current understanding, emerging solutions, and future directions. J Am Med Inform Assoc.2021;28(5): 895–898. doi:10.1093/jamia/ocab058
  9. 9.
    1. Ayaz M,
    2. Pasha MF,
    3. Alzahrani MY,
    4. Budiarto R,
    5. Stiawan D
    . The Fast Health Interoperability Resources (FHIR) standard: systematic literature review of implementations, applications, challenges and opportunities. JMIR Med Inform. 2021;9(7):e21929. doi:10.2196/21929
  10. 10.
    1. AAFP advocacy FOCUS: Health information TECHNOLOGY (HIT)
    . AAFP Advocacy: Health IT. Published Nov 10, 2019. Accessed Aug 17, 2021. https://www.aafp.org/advocacy/advocacy-topics/health-it.html
  11. 11.
    1. Sequeira L,
    2. Almilaji K,
    3. Strudwick G,
    4. Jankowicz D,
    5. Tajirian T
    . EHR “SWAT” teams: a physician engagement initiative to improve Electronic Health Record (EHR) experiences and mitigate possible causes of EHR-related burnout. JAMIA Open. 2021;4(2):b018. doi:10.1093/jamiaopen/ooab018
  12. 12.
    1. The EveryONE Project
    . Published Dec 5, 2019. Accessed Sep 8, 2021. https://www.aafp.org/family-physician/patient-care/the-everyone-project.html
  13. 13.
    1. Society for the Teachers of Family Medicine
    . Advocacy resources and key issues. Accessed Aug 2021. https://www.stfm.org/Advocacy

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