Physicians, the Affordable Care Act, and primary care: disruptive change or business as usual?

PD Jacobson, SA Jazowski - Journal of general internal medicine, 2011 - Springer
PD Jacobson, SA Jazowski
Journal of general internal medicine, 2011Springer
Abstract The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act 1 (ACA) presages disruptive change
in primary care delivery. With expanded access to primary care for millions of new patients,
physicians and policymakers face increased pressure to solve the perennial shortage of
primary care practitioners. Despite the controversy surrounding its enactment, the ACA
should motivate organized medicine to take the lead in shaping new strategies for meeting
the nation's primary care needs. In this commentary, we argue that physicians should take …
Abstract
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act1 (ACA) presages disruptive change in primary care delivery. With expanded access to primary care for millions of new patients, physicians and policymakers face increased pressure to solve the perennial shortage of primary care practitioners. Despite the controversy surrounding its enactment, the ACA should motivate organized medicine to take the lead in shaping new strategies for meeting the nation’s primary care needs. In this commentary, we argue that physicians should take the lead in developing policies to address the primary care shortage. First, physicians and medical professional organizations should abandon their long-standing opposition to non-physician practitioners (NPPs) as primary care providers. Second, physicians should re-imagine how primary care is delivered, including shifting routine care to NPPs while retaining responsibility for complex patients and oversight of the new primary care arrangements. Third, the ACA’s focus on wellness and prevention creates opportunities for physicians to integrate population health into primary care practice.
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