<p class="first" id="d925210e120">The year 2016 marked the 20th anniversary of the
hospitalist profession, with more
than 50,000 physicians identifying as hospitalists. The Achilles heel of hospitalist
medicine, however, is discontinuity. Despite many current payment and delivery systems
rewarding this discontinuity and severing long-term relationships between patient
and primary care teams at the hospital door, primary care does not stop being important
when a person is admitted to the hospital. The notion of a broken primary care continuum
is not an academic construct, it causes real harm to patients. As a step toward fixing
the discontinuity in our health care systems, we propose that every hospital needs
a Chief Primary Care Medical Officer (CPCMO), an expert in practice across the spectrum
of care. The CPCMO can lead hospital efforts to create systems that ensure primary
care’s continuum is complete, while strengthening physician collaboration across specialties,
and moving toward achieving the Quadruple Aim of enhancing patient experience, improving
population health, reducing costs, and improving the work life of health care providers.
For hospitals operating on value-based payment structures, anticipated improvement
in measurable outcomes such as decreased length of stay, decreased readmission rates,
improved transitions of care, improved patient satisfaction, improved access to primary
care, and improved patient health, will enhance the rate of return on the hospital’s
investment. The speciality of family medicine should reevaluate our purpose, and reembrace
our mission as personal physicians by championing the creation of Chief Primary Care
Medical Officers.
</p>