Abstract

BackgroundThe Future of Family Medicine Report calls for a fundamental redesign of the American family physician workplace. At the same time, academic family practices are under economic pressure. Most family medicine departments do not have self-supporting practices, but seek support from specialty colleagues or hospital practice plans. Alternative models for academic family practices that are economically viable and consistent with the principles of family medicine are needed. This article presents several "experiments" to address these challenges.MethodsThe basis of comparison is a traditional academic family medicine center. Apart of the faculty practice plan, our center consistently operated at a deficit despite high productivity. A number of different practice types and alternative models of service delivery were therefore developed and tested. They ranged from a multi-specialty office arrangement, to a community clinic operated as part of a federally-qualified health center, to a team of providers based in and providing care for residents of an elderly public housing project. Financial comparisons using consistent accounting across models are provided.ResultsAcademic family practices can, at least in some settings, operate without subsidy while providing continuity of care to a broad segment of the community. The prerequisites are that the clinicians must see patients efficiently, and be able to bill appropriately for their payer mix.ConclusionExperimenting within academic practice structure and organization is worthwhile, and can result in economically viable alternatives to traditional models.

Highlights

  • The Future of Family Medicine Report [1] calls for a fundamental redesign of the American family physician workplace

  • Most departments have given up hope of operating selfsustaining practices, and seek support from their specialty colleagues in return for referrals and revenue generated by ancillary services

  • Crafting contracts that included academic departments and the practice plan, as well as hospitals, public schools, county social services, the city housing authority and a federally qualified community health center, required a level of institutional oversight and assistance which may be difficult to find in other settings

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Summary

Introduction

The Future of Family Medicine Report calls for a fundamental redesign of the American family physician workplace. The Future of Family Medicine Report [1] calls for a fundamental redesign of the American family physician workplace This change will require additional time, effort, and financial investment [2], at a time when academic family practices are under heavy economic pressure. Most departments have given up hope of operating selfsustaining practices, and seek support from their specialty colleagues in return for referrals and revenue generated by ancillary services. Such relationships are possible, as each dollar of revenue generated in the family practice can be (page number not for citation purposes).

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