Abstract
Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in the United States and accounts for ≈17% of national health expenditures and 30% of Medicare spending.1 Among physician groups and professional societies, cardiologists have been among those leading efforts to create evidence-based guidelines and to measure quality of care. In the post-health reform era, national efforts have expanded beyond quality to include innovative delivery models, such as the patient-centered medical home (PCMH), the medical neighborhood, and accountable care organizations (ACOs). This next generation of care models and the payment strategies that support them incentivize efficiency, patient-centeredness, and care coordination with an emphasis on primary care. We propose strategies for cardiologists to create collaborative opportunities within these new models drawing from examples from around the country within the context of a framework developed by the American College of Physicians.2 Pursuing these approaches or others along similar lines will enable cardiologists to lead and to be active participants in shaping delivery system transformation. These innovative delivery models share similar features. The PCMH is a model of care that emphasizes additional support for primary care providers within a patient-centered team, whereas a medical neighborhood represents a broader collection of primary care doctors, specialists such as cardiologists, hospitals, and other stakeholders within a region that seek to reduce fragmented care by sharing accountability.2,3 The ACO, too, is a broader care delivery arrangement, but in this case, groups of providers are accountable for the quality, cost, and overall care of a particular population, typically defined by the payer. In the Medicare Shared Savings Program (MSSP), an ACO model for Medicare beneficiaries, the ACO can capture shared savings if it reduces its healthcare expenditures and meets certain quality performance standards, nearly half of which are related to cardiovascular disease.4 Within the …
Published Version
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