RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Quality, Satisfaction, and Financial Efficiency Associated With Elements of Primary Care Practice Transformation: Preliminary Findings JF The Annals of Family Medicine JO Ann Fam Med FD American Academy of Family Physicians SP S50 OP S59 DO 10.1370/afm.1475 VO 11 IS Suppl 1 A1 Day, Julie A1 Scammon, Debra L. A1 Kim, Jaewhan A1 Sheets-Mervis, Annie A1 Day, Rachel A1 Tomoaia-Cotisel, Andrada A1 Waitzman, Norman J. A1 Magill, Michael K. YR 2013 UL http://www.annfammed.org/content/11/Suppl_1/S50.abstract AB PURPOSE We examined quality, satisfaction, financial, and productivity outcomes associated with implementation of Care by Design (CBD), the University of Utah’s version of the patient-centered medical home. METHODS We measured the implementation of individual elements of CBD using a combination of observation, chart audit, and collection of data from operational reports. We assessed correlations between level of implementation of each element and measures of quality, patient and clinician satisfaction, financial performance, and efficiency. RESULTS Team function elements had positive correlations (P ≤.05) with 6 quality measures, 4 patient satisfaction measure, and 3 clinician satisfaction measures. Continuity elements had positive correlations with 2 satisfaction measures and 1 quality measure. Clinician continuity was the key driver in the composite element of appropriate access. Unexpected findings included the negative correlation of use of templated questionnaires with 3 patient satisfaction measures. Trade-offs were observed for performance of blood draws in the examination room and the efficiency of visits, with some positive and some negative correlations depending on the outcome. CONCLUSIONS Elements related to care teams and continuity appear to be key elements of CBD as they influence all 3 CBD organizing principles: appropriate access, care teams, and planned care. These relationships, as well as unexpected, unfavorable ones, require further study and refined analyses to identify causal associations.