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      The invisible homebound: setting quality-of-care standards for home-based primary and palliative care.

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          Abstract

          Approximately four million adults in the United States are homebound, and many of them cannot access office-based primary care. Home-based medical care can improve outcomes and reduce health care costs, but this care operates in a quality measurement desert, having been largely left out of the national conversation on care quality. To address this shortcoming, two of the authors created the National Home-Based Primary and Palliative Care Network, an organization whose members include exemplary home-based medical practices, professional societies, and patient advocacy groups. This article describes the current status of home-based medical care in the United States and offers a brief narrative of a fictional homebound patient and the health events and fragmented care she faces. The article then describes the network's quality-of-care framework, which includes ten quality-of-care domains, thirty-two standards, and twenty quality indicators that are being tested in the field. The same two authors also developed a practice-based registry that will be used for quality-of-care benchmarking, practice-based quality improvement, performance reporting, and comparative effectiveness research. Together, these steps should help bring home-based medical care further into the mainstream of US health care.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Health Aff (Millwood)
          Health affairs (Project Hope)
          1544-5208
          0278-2715
          Jan 2015
          : 34
          : 1
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Bruce Leff (bleff@jhmi.edu) is a professor of medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, in Baltimore, Maryland.
          [2 ] Charlotte M. Carlson is an associate medical director at On Lok Senior Health Services, in San Francisco, California.
          [3 ] Debra Saliba is director of the University of California, Los Angeles, Borun Center and a research physician in the Veterans Affairs Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System.
          [4 ] Christine Ritchie is a professor in the Department of Medicine at the University of California, San Francisco.
          Article
          34/1/21
          10.1377/hlthaff.2014.1008
          25561640
          2228f697-8d9c-465f-98f4-b49c36289595
          Project HOPE—The People-to-People Health Foundation, Inc.
          History

          Health Reform,Home,Organization and Delivery of Care,Quality Of Care,Special Populations

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