PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - William L. Miller AU - Benjamin F. Crabtree AU - Paul A. Nutting AU - Kurt C. Stange AU - Carlos Roberto Jaén TI - Primary Care Practice Development: A Relationship-Centered Approach AID - 10.1370/afm.1089 DP - 2010 May 01 TA - The Annals of Family Medicine PG - S68--S79 VI - 8 IP - Suppl 1 4099 - http://www.annfammed.org/content/8/Suppl_1/S68.short 4100 - http://www.annfammed.org/content/8/Suppl_1/S68.full SO - Ann Fam Med2010 May 01; 8 AB - PURPOSE Numerous primary care practice development efforts, many related to the patient-centered medical home (PCMH), are emerging across the United States with few guides available to inform them. This article presents a relationship-centered practice development approach to understand practice and to aid in fostering practice development to advance key attributes of primary care that include access to first-contact care, comprehensive care, coordination of care, and a personal relationship over time. METHODS Informed by complexity theory and relational theories of organizational learning, we built on discoveries from the American Academy of Family Physicians’ National Demonstration Project (NDP) and 15 years of research to understand and improve primary care practice. RESULTS Primary care practices can fruitfully be understood as complex adaptive systems consisting of a core (a practice’s key resources, organizational structure, and functional processes), adaptive reserve (practice features that enhance resilience, such as relationships), and attentiveness to the local environment. The effectiveness of these attributes represents the practice’s internal capability. With adequate motivation, healthy, thriving practices advance along a pathway of slow, continuous developmental change with occasional rapid periods of transformation as they evolve better fits with their environment. Practice development is enhanced through systematically using strategies that involve setting direction and boundaries, implementing sensing systems, focusing on creative tensions, and fostering learning conversations. CONCLUSIONS Successful practice development begins with changes that strengthen practices’ core, build adaptive reserve, and expand attentiveness to the local environment. Development progresses toward transformation through enhancing primary care attributes.