Publications
The Center exists in part to create original evidence and information that support and advance conversations around professionalism, value, and other health care issues.
READ about scientific publications, briefs, and reports emerging from the Center and its collaborators below.
Role of social deprivation on asthma care quality among a cohort of children in US community health centres
- Jennifer A. Lucas
- Andrew W. Bazemore
- Miguel Marino
- Katie Fankhauser
- Sophia Giebultowicz
- Stuart Cowburn
- Jorge Kaufmann
- David Ezekiel-Herrera
- John Heintzman
Submitted on: July, 2021
Objective
Social deprivation is associated with worse asthma outcomes. The Social Deprivation Index is a composite measure of social determinants of health used to identify neighbourhood-level disadvantage in healthcare. Our objective was to determine if higher neighbourhood-level social deprivation is associated with documented asthma care quality measures among children treated at community health centres (CHCs).
Methods
(setting, participants, outcome measures) We used data from CHCs in 15 states in the Accelerating Data Value Across a National Community Health Center Network (ADVANCE). The sample included 34 266 children with asthma from 2008 to 2017, aged 3–17 living in neighbourhoods with differing levels of social deprivation measured using quartiles of the Social Deprivation Index score. We conducted logistic regression to examine the odds of problem list documentation of asthma and asthma severity, and negative binomial regression for rates of albuterol, inhaled steroid and oral steroid prescription adjusted for patient-level covariates.
Results
Children from the most deprived neighbourhoods had increased rates of albuterol (rate ratio (RR)=1.22, 95% CI 1.13 to 1.32) compared with those in the least deprived neighbourhoods, while the point estimate for inhaled steroids was higher, but fell just short of significance at the alpha=0.05 level (RR=1.16, 95% CI 0.99 to 1.34). We did not observe community-level differences in problem list documentation of asthma or asthma severity.
Conclusions
Higher neighbourhood-level social deprivation was associated with more albuterol and inhaled steroid prescriptions among children with asthma, while problem list documentation of asthma and asthma severity varied little across neighbourhoods with differing deprivation scores. While the homogeneity of the CHC safety net setting studied may mitigate variation in diagnosis and documentation of asthma, enhanced clinician awareness of differences in community risk could help target paediatric patients at risk of lower quality asthma care.
Integrating primary care and public health to enhance response to a pandemic
- Andrew Bazemore
- Melina Taylor
- Karen Kinder
- Cristina Mannie
- Joe George
- Stefan Strydom
- Felicity Goodyear-Smith
Submitted on: June, 2021
A survey of PC stakeholders (clinicians, researchers, and policy-makers) from 111 countries revealed many of the challenges encountered when facing the pandemic without a coordinated effort between PC and PH functions. Participants’ responses to open-ended questions underscored how each of the key actions could have been strengthened in their country and are potential factors to why a strong PC system may not have contributed to reduced mortality.
New Podcast: Dr. Robert Phillips Discusses the National Academy of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine’s Recent Report, ” Implementing High-Quality Primary Care”
- Robert L. Phillips Jr., MD, MSPH
- Dr. Bob Phillips
Submitted on: June, 2021
Among numerous other statistics, despite spending approximately twice what comparative countries spend on healthcare, the US has highest rates of preventable deaths. Even wealthy Americans are more likely to, for example, die during childbirth, from cancer and from heart attacks than those in 12 comparative countries. This is substantially due to the fact primary care in the US, as the National Academy of Medicine report states in its opening, is “slowly dying.” The report further notes despite the fact primary care’s value is beyond dispute, approximately 25% of Americans do not have a primary care physician and 80 million Americans live, per HRSA, in primary care health professions shortage areas. In turn, this is largely due to the fact only 5% of healthcare spending goes to primary care despite such visits accounting for 40% of all medical office visits. Translation: primary care physicians are substantially undercompensated that contributes to a growing shortage of primary care clinicians.
Events and Convenings:
Moving from Ideas to Action
The Center for Professionalism & Value is working to engage the public and advance big ideas in the realm of professionalism, and advance evidence in support of effective policy.
Upcoming Events: Join Us
AAFP’s Family Medicine Experience (FMX)
October 13-17, 2020
The Center for Professionalism & Value in Health Care’s PRIME Registry will be in booth #3515 at AAFP’s Family Medicine Experience, October 13-17, 2020.
Press Releases
Stay up-to-date on the latest developments, from recently released studies and research projects, to newly published articles and one-pagers.
Investment Needed in Primary Care Spending
05/18/2020
