Skip to main content

Main menu

  • HOME
  • ARTICLES
    • Current Issue
    • Ahead of Print
    • Archives
    • Abstracts In Press
    • Special Issue Archive
    • Subject Collections
  • INFO FOR
    • Authors
    • Reviewers
    • Call For Papers
    • Subscribers
    • Advertisers
  • SUBMIT
    • Manuscript
    • Peer Review
  • ABOUT
    • The JABFM
    • The Editing Fellowship
    • Editorial Board
    • Indexing
    • Editors' Blog
  • CLASSIFIEDS
  • Other Publications
    • abfm

User menu

Search

  • Advanced search
American Board of Family Medicine
  • Other Publications
    • abfm
American Board of Family Medicine

American Board of Family Medicine

Advanced Search

  • HOME
  • ARTICLES
    • Current Issue
    • Ahead of Print
    • Archives
    • Abstracts In Press
    • Special Issue Archive
    • Subject Collections
  • INFO FOR
    • Authors
    • Reviewers
    • Call For Papers
    • Subscribers
    • Advertisers
  • SUBMIT
    • Manuscript
    • Peer Review
  • ABOUT
    • The JABFM
    • The Editing Fellowship
    • Editorial Board
    • Indexing
    • Editors' Blog
  • CLASSIFIEDS
  • JABFM on Bluesky
  • JABFM On Facebook
  • JABFM On Twitter
  • JABFM On YouTube
Article CommentaryCommentary

An Argument for Comprehensiveness as the “Special Sauce” in a Recipe for the Patient-Centered Medical Home

Christina Holt
The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine January 2014, 27 (1) 8-10; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3122/jabfm.2014.01.130296
Christina Holt
From the Department of Family Medicine, Maine Medical Center, Portland.
MD, MSc
  • Find this author on Google Scholar
  • Find this author on PubMed
  • Search for this author on this site
  • Article
  • References
  • Info & Metrics
  • PDF
Loading

Abstract

How can we study and quantify potential value that may be added by having primary care specialists (PCSs) from both family medicine and internal medicine provide preventive care services for women? Does seeing one's personal physician (PCP) make a difference? Early answers come from the study by Cohen and Coco in this issue: “Do physicians address other medical problems during preventive gynecologic visits?” Their assessment of a nationally representative sample of preventive gynecological visits uses self-reported data from the physicians to tell us “yes” and to quantify to what extent by specialty, region, and PCP status. This sampling of the content of women's preventive health visits allows us to get a flavor for how the majority of PCSs provide comprehensive care for concomitant acute and chronic issues in the context of individual preventive care visits. Patients are unlikely to parse their presenting concerns into the acute or chronic or preventive categories. The practice of addressing multiple issues during one visit improves the efficiency of addressing patient concerns. This may be a key to the special flavor of a true patient-centered medical home.

We all recognize clinical sessions similar to these scenarios: a mom comes in for her child's preventive care, but she needs a refill on her contraceptive pill. A teacher is scheduled for a physical examination, has readied himself to quit smoking, but started attending 12-step meetings to cope with anxiety about his wife's excessive drinking and needs to talk. In a visit booked to discuss chronic diabetes, grief and sadness about the patient's elderly mother arise when questions about food choices, time for exercise, and money for test strips are posed. In these cases, we are gratified that the comprehensiveness of our training and the continuity of our relationships allow us to assess and address the patient's concerns and make an appropriate plan. This often feels like the “special sauce” of family medicine and primary care: there may be many ingredients and potentially effective cooks in the kitchen, but being able to provide for patients' needs at the point of care in a continuous, comprehensive, and contextualized relationship is part of the old recipe of primary care.1 Keeping this intact allows the provision of care as a patient-centered medical home (PCMH) to have the sweet taste of home cooking.

If indeed these are critical skills for making an office visit part of a true patient-centered care model, how do we study the frequency or effectiveness of these aspects of our full spectrum of work? Study of administrative billing data can clarify who is attending primary care visits, but does not capture the scope of care provided. When visits cross the boundary of acute issues into preventive care, or preventive care into chronic disease or mental health management, the coding rules become complex and are often not followed. This is potentially due to the extra effort and time required to code for the momentary interactions to address concerns connected to—but essentially distinct from—the main point of the visit. This is especially true if the concerns pertain to the patient's relationships with family members or their health needs—the patient's true context of care—but which rarely fit into the main reason for visit. Payers have changing and at times overly complicated arrangements for what can be paid for during any given encounter. Studies show that providers will address more issues than they document and bill for, particularly if they have an ongoing relationship with the patient.2

Cohen and Coco3 provide a window into how primary care comprehensiveness may be enacted at specific visits for women's health. Their novel approach analyzed physician self-reported visit content and status as personal physician (PCP) using a nationally representative sample of office visits from the National Center for Health Statistics National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NAMCS) and National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS). These data provide the opportunity to study the intersection of actual care provided and service utilization, outside of the constraints of specific visit coding choices, which may habitually vary between primary and specialty care. Understanding how care is delivered effectively is essential to PCMH goals of comprehensiveness, continuity, and access, while pointing at the contribution of relationships over time.

Although Cohen and Coco3 do not directly study outcomes, a patient's receipt of preventive services in the context of a usual source of care has been shown to be more cost-effective and to prevent the need for hospitalizations, among other higher-cost services.4⇓–6 Patient satisfaction also has been linked to having a usual source of care with an ongoing provider relationship.7 We definitely want to know how this benefit develops and measure what we are doing to support these valuable outcomes. The study by Cohen and Coco explicitly quantifies why this may be, with evidence of the frequency with which additional medical concerns are addressed in the preventive care visit by gynecology specialists or PCSs. Their article shows that at least one third of patients who present for cancer screening also seek clarity about other medical problems, and the PCSs address these in the context of the visit more than half the time. PCSs and gynecology specialists are equally likely to address an additional gynecologic concern at a gynecologic preventive visit (12% of visits), but PCSs are >3 times more likely to address ≥2 non-gynecologic concerns at these preventive visits. Nearly 90% of the primary care respondents (family medicine and internal medicine) self-identified as the patient's PCP, and these patients with a usual source of care were more likely to have efficient access to comprehensive care in this sample. These self-reported data from the NAMCS and NHAMCS surveys agree with previous reports that PCSs are more likely to address >3 separate issues during visits2 and that these cover a broad variety of medical care. Significant shifts in the scope of practice in family medicine have been noted with relation to inpatient and surgical services and maternity and newborn care, but outpatient management across the spectrum of illness remains high, and outpatient visits—regardless of the stated purpose—remain a site for the full spectrum of family-centered care.8,9

What can we say about care received outside the context of a PCP or PCMH? While there is some regional variation evident from this study related to proportion of preventive gynecologic visits to PCSs (eg, lower rates in the south, higher rates in rural areas), overall, a much higher proportion of PCSs than gynecologists were the patient's PCP (90% vs 15%). Further work should focus on understanding the scope of care provided by those who perceive themselves to be PCPs, and the best way to coordinate the PCMH “neighborhood,” or coordination with specialists.10 What opportunities for linking acute and chronic care or preventive care might have been lost because of the choice of provider?

Another study of the NAMCS and NHAMCS surveys showed that while ten main diagnoses account for 90% of visits to urgent care centers, more than 53% of patients at urgent care have no PCP. When these same diagnoses were the primary reason for care at PCS visits, 19.3% also included preventive or chronic care provided at the same time.11 While access remains a key component for patients at the time services are needed, facilitating comprehensive care for potentially asymptomatic conditions or behaviors is clearly part of the “special sauce” of primary care, leading to less costly and less fragmented comprehensive first-contact care.12

Overall, the innovative study of the content and context of preventive care by Cohen and Coco3 adds to our understanding of how variation in the comprehensiveness and complexity of services may differ based on specialty. A “special sauce” for effective primary care in the PCMH has many ingredients: it includes relationships over time, aims to address efficiently multiple issues, and prioritizes connecting the person with their role within a family or community. While there is no one recipe to mix these seasoned relationships, this article illuminates how one of these ingredients—comprehensiveness—might actually make it into the sauce at the point of care and why we should value the flavor that this adds to the PCMH stew.

Notes

  • Funding: none.

  • Conflict of interest: none declared.

  • See Related Article on Page 13.

References

  1. 1.↵
    1. Loxterkamp D
    . Benefits of continuity of care. Fam Med 2009;41:312.
    OpenUrlPubMed
  2. 2.↵
    1. Beasley JW,
    2. Hankey TH,
    3. Erickson R,
    4. et al
    . How many problems do family physicians manage at each encounter? A WReN study. Ann Fam Med 2004;2:405–10.
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  3. 3.↵
    1. Cohen D,
    2. Coco A
    . Do physicians address other medical problems during preventive gynecologic visits? J Am Board Fam Med 2014;27:13–8.
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  4. 4.↵
    1. Saultz JW,
    2. Lochner J
    . Interpersonal continuity of care and care outcomes: a critical review. Ann Fam Med 2005;3:159–66.
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  5. 5.↵
    1. DeVoe JE,
    2. Saultz JW,
    3. Krois L,
    4. Tillotson CJ
    . A medical home versus temporary housing: the importance of a stable usual source of care. Pediatrics. 2009;124:1363–71.
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  6. 6.↵
    1. Clark EC,
    2. Saultz J,
    3. Buckley DI,
    4. Rdesinski R,
    5. Goldberg B,
    6. Gill JM
    . The association of family continuity with infant health service use. J Am Board Fam Med 2008;21:385–91.
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  7. 7.↵
    1. Saultz JW,
    2. Albedaiwi W
    . Interpersonal continuity of care and patient satisfaction: a critical review. Ann Fam Med 2004;2:445–51.
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  8. 8.↵
    1. Bazemore AW,
    2. Petterson S,
    3. Johnson N,
    4. et al
    . What services do family physicians provide in a time of primary care transition? J Am Board Fam Med 2011;24:635–6.
    OpenUrlFREE Full Text
  9. 9.↵
    1. Xierali IM,
    2. Puffer JC,
    3. Tong ST,
    4. Bazemore AW,
    5. Green LA
    . The percentage of family physicians attending to women's gender–specific health needs is declining. J Am Board Fam Med 2012;25:406–7.
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  10. 10.↵
    1. Yee JHF
    . The patient-centered medical home neighbor: a subspecialty physician's view. Ann Intern Med 2011;154:63–4.
    OpenUrlPubMed
  11. 11.↵
    1. Mehrotra A,
    2. Wang MC,
    3. Lave JR,
    4. Adams JL,
    5. McGlynn EA
    . Retail clinics, primary care physicians, and emergency departments: a comparison of patients' visits. Health Aff (Millwood) 2008;27:1272–82.
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  12. 12.↵
    1. Bennett MD,
    2. Applegate WB,
    3. Chilton LA,
    4. Skipper BJ,
    5. White RE
    . Comparison of family medicine and internal medicine: charges for continuing ambulatory care. Med Care 1983;21:830–9.
    OpenUrlPubMed
PreviousNext
Back to top

In this issue

The Journal of the American Board of Family     Medicine: 27 (1)
The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine
Vol. 27, Issue 1
January-February 2014
  • Table of Contents
  • Table of Contents (PDF)
  • Cover (PDF)
  • Index by author
  • Back Matter (PDF)
  • Front Matter (PDF)
Print
Download PDF
Article Alerts
Sign In to Email Alerts with your Email Address
Email Article

Thank you for your interest in spreading the word on American Board of Family Medicine.

NOTE: We only request your email address so that the person you are recommending the page to knows that you wanted them to see it, and that it is not junk mail. We do not capture any email address.

Enter multiple addresses on separate lines or separate them with commas.
An Argument for Comprehensiveness as the “Special Sauce” in a Recipe for the Patient-Centered Medical Home
(Your Name) has sent you a message from American Board of Family Medicine
(Your Name) thought you would like to see the American Board of Family Medicine web site.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
1 + 0 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.
Citation Tools
An Argument for Comprehensiveness as the “Special Sauce” in a Recipe for the Patient-Centered Medical Home
Christina Holt
The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine Jan 2014, 27 (1) 8-10; DOI: 10.3122/jabfm.2014.01.130296

Citation Manager Formats

  • BibTeX
  • Bookends
  • EasyBib
  • EndNote (tagged)
  • EndNote 8 (xml)
  • Medlars
  • Mendeley
  • Papers
  • RefWorks Tagged
  • Ref Manager
  • RIS
  • Zotero
Share
An Argument for Comprehensiveness as the “Special Sauce” in a Recipe for the Patient-Centered Medical Home
Christina Holt
The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine Jan 2014, 27 (1) 8-10; DOI: 10.3122/jabfm.2014.01.130296
Twitter logo Facebook logo Mendeley logo
  • Tweet Widget
  • Facebook Like
  • Google Plus One

Jump to section

  • Article
    • Abstract
    • Notes
    • References
  • References
  • Info & Metrics
  • PDF

Related Articles

  • Do Physicians Address Other Medical Problems During Preventive Gynecologic Visits?
  • PubMed
  • Google Scholar

Cited By...

  • Family Physicians' Scope of Practice and American Board of Family Medicine Recertification Examination Performance
  • Google Scholar

More in this TOC Section

  • Empowering Family Physicians in Medical Staff Leadership to Foster Physician Well-Being
  • Maternity Care Deserts: Key Drivers of the National Maternal Health Crisis
  • Training in Gender Affirming Care is Medically Necessary
Show more Commentaries

Similar Articles

Navigate

  • Home
  • Current Issue
  • Past Issues

Authors & Reviewers

  • Info For Authors
  • Info For Reviewers
  • Submit A Manuscript/Review

Other Services

  • Get Email Alerts
  • Classifieds
  • Reprints and Permissions

Other Resources

  • Forms
  • Contact Us
  • ABFM News

© 2025 American Board of Family Medicine

Powered by HighWire