University of Michigan School of Public Health, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2029, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2011 Aug;26(8):934-7. doi: 10.1007/s11606-011-1695-8. Epub 2011 Apr 1.
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 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.
《患者保护与平价医疗法案》(ACA)预示着初级保健服务将发生颠覆性变化。随着数百万新患者获得更多的初级保健服务,医生和政策制定者面临着更大的压力,需要解决长期存在的初级保健从业者短缺问题。尽管该法案的颁布引发了争议,但 ACA 应该促使有组织的医学行业率先制定新战略,以满足国家的初级保健需求。在这篇评论中,我们认为医生应该在制定解决初级保健短缺问题的政策方面发挥主导作用。首先,医生和医学专业组织应该放弃长期以来对非医师从业者(NPP)作为初级保健提供者的反对。其次,医生应该重新设想如何提供初级保健,包括将常规护理交给 NPP,同时保留对复杂患者的责任和对新初级保健安排的监督。第三,ACA 对健康和预防的关注为医生将人群健康纳入初级保健实践创造了机会。