PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Timothy P. Daaleman TI - The Medical Home: Locus of Physician Formation AID - 10.3122/jabfm.2008.05.080083 DP - 2008 Sep 01 TA - The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine PG - 451--457 VI - 21 IP - 5 4099 - http://www.jabfm.org/content/21/5/451.short 4100 - http://www.jabfm.org/content/21/5/451.full SO - J Am Board Fam Med2008 Sep 01; 21 AB - Family medicine is currently undergoing a transformation and, amid such change, the medical home has emerged as the new polestar. This article examines the medical home through the lens of philosopher Alasdair MacIntyre and offers a perspective, informed by Hubert Dreyfus and Peter Senge, about medical homes as practical sites of formation for family physicians. The intellectual past of family medicine points to contextually sensitive patient care as a practice that is particular to the discipline, with the virtue of “placing patients within contexts over time” as a commonly held virtue. Dreyfus provides a model of knowledge and skill acquisition that is relevant to the training of family physicians in practical wisdom. In this model, there is a continuum from novice to more advanced stages of professional formation that is aided by rules that not only must be learned, but must be applied in greater contextually informed situations. Senge's emphasis on learning organizations—organizations where people are continually learning how to learn together—presents a framework for evaluating the extent to which future medical homes facilitate or retard the formation of family physicians.