TY - JOUR
T1 - Establishing a medical home for patients with inflammatory bowel diseases
T2 - a qualitative study
AU - Gorbenko, Ksenia
AU - Mendelev, Eliezer
AU - Dubinsky, Marla
AU - Keefer, Laurie
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© the Author(s), 2020 Licensee PAGEPress, Italy.
PY - 2020/12/29
Y1 - 2020/12/29
N2 - The Patient-Centered Medical Home model has gained popularity in primary care to provide early effective care to patients with chronic conditions. Prior research on specialty medical homes has been cross-sectional and focused on patient outcomes. The objective of this longitudinal qualitative study was to identify best practices in establishing a specialty medical home in Inflammatory Bowel Diseases (IBD Home). The multimethod study included direct observations of multidisciplinary team meetings (30 hours over one year) and in-depth interviews with individual team members (N=11) and referring physicians (N=6) around their participation in the IBD home. All interviews were professionally transcribed verbatim. Two researchers coded transcripts for themes using NVivo software. Weekly team meetings (N=9±3) included behavioral health providers, nurse practitioners, nurses, dietitians, a clinical pharmacist, and clinical coordinators. Physicians referred patients with psychosocial comorbidities to the IBD home. Initially the team enrolled all referred patients. Later, they developed exclusion criteria and a patient complexity score to manage the volume. Some providers reported increase in their workload (social work, nutrition) while others’ workload was unaffected (gastroenterology, nursing). No physicians attended team meetings regularly. Regular in-person meetings helped to strengthen the team. Involving physicians as consultants on an ad hoc basis without regular meeting attendance empowered other team members to take ownership of the IBD Home.
AB - The Patient-Centered Medical Home model has gained popularity in primary care to provide early effective care to patients with chronic conditions. Prior research on specialty medical homes has been cross-sectional and focused on patient outcomes. The objective of this longitudinal qualitative study was to identify best practices in establishing a specialty medical home in Inflammatory Bowel Diseases (IBD Home). The multimethod study included direct observations of multidisciplinary team meetings (30 hours over one year) and in-depth interviews with individual team members (N=11) and referring physicians (N=6) around their participation in the IBD home. All interviews were professionally transcribed verbatim. Two researchers coded transcripts for themes using NVivo software. Weekly team meetings (N=9±3) included behavioral health providers, nurse practitioners, nurses, dietitians, a clinical pharmacist, and clinical coordinators. Physicians referred patients with psychosocial comorbidities to the IBD home. Initially the team enrolled all referred patients. Later, they developed exclusion criteria and a patient complexity score to manage the volume. Some providers reported increase in their workload (social work, nutrition) while others’ workload was unaffected (gastroenterology, nursing). No physicians attended team meetings regularly. Regular in-person meetings helped to strengthen the team. Involving physicians as consultants on an ad hoc basis without regular meeting attendance empowered other team members to take ownership of the IBD Home.
KW - Multidisciplinary team
KW - patient-centered practice
KW - qualitative methods
KW - specialty medical home
KW - team-based care
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85198141158&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.4081/qrmh.2020.8801
DO - 10.4081/qrmh.2020.8801
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85198141158
SN - 2532-2044
VL - 4
SP - 75
EP - 82
JO - Qualitative Research in Medicine and Healthcare
JF - Qualitative Research in Medicine and Healthcare
IS - 2
M1 - 8801
ER -