The
Community Health Center, Inc. (CHC) has been awarded a $250,000 grant
from health care benefits company Aetna to conduct a two-year study
aimed at improving the coordination of health care for low-income and
underinsured patients at community health care clinics and similar
safety-net health care providers.
The
study’s goal is to create a measurement toolkit that can successfully
evaluate the levels of care coordination at primary care practices
providing outpatient care for underserved populations.
Care
coordination is a central component to many health care reform efforts
to improve patients’ health, patients’ experience of care and at the
same time lower costs. Care coordination is typically defined as a
patient-centered, interdisciplinary approach where all of a patient's
needs are managed across providers and settings in an integrated,
cost-effective manner.
“According to a study published in the Annals of Internal Medicine,
primary care physicians for Medicare patients typically share patient
care for their caseload with 299 other physicians with whom they should
coordinate care,” said Daren Anderson, M.D., vice president and chief
quality officer of CHC. “Clearly, closely coordinated care is an
important strategy to make sure patients have all their health needs
addressed and don’t receive conflicting instructions, duplicated tests
or unnecessary treatments.
“Currently,
there are very few tools available to assess the quality of care
coordination in various settings, and there are none that are specific
to our setting,” Anderson said. “Aetna’s grant will enable us to
address these issues and provide tools to health centers nationwide
that are working to improve health outcomes, enhance patient experience
and reduce costs.”
Anderson
and his research team will test the care coordination measures they
develop at a cross-section of CHC sites, Connecticut’s largest network
of Federally Qualified Health Centers. CHC has primary care sites in 13
communities in the state, as well as school-based clinics and mobile
dental units. CHC serves 130,000 patients, nearly all living at or
below 200 percent of the poverty level.
Improving health care through better integrated and more closely coordinated health care is one of the Aetna Foundation’s three program areas. In the past two years, Aetna and the Aetna Foundation have directed more than $2 million in grants for projects in the United States and the United Kingdom to advance integrated health care and measure the effectiveness of different integrated health care models.
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