Master R J, Feltin M, Jainchill J, Mark R, Kavesh W N, Rabkin M T, Turner B, Bachrach S, Lennox S
N Engl J Med. 1980 Jun 26;302(26):1434-40. doi: 10.1056/NEJM198006263022602.
We describe an approach to health care in the inner city: a multidisciplinary system of physicians and mid-level practitioners that provides individualized care to chronically ill, elderly, homebound, and nursing-home residents of urban Boston who would otherwise be forced into an inappropriate reliance on teaching hospitals. Linked to four neighborhood health centers, three home-care programs, and a teaching hospital, and financially self-supporting except for the home-care component, the system cared for 3000 ambulatory, 280 homebound, and 358 nursing-home patients in the representative year described. In-hospital use, particularly hospital days, was reduced when judged by existing data for comparable (though not identical) populations. Based on stable physician practices, the system offers a workable approach to the related problems of care, manpower, and cost in the urban core.