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Greater investment in primary care is associated with lower costs, higher patient satisfaction, fewer hospitalizations and emergency department visits, and lower mortality. Despite current high levels of healthcare spending in the United States, the proportion spent on primary care is insufficient. A shift in resources to support greater access to comprehensive, coordinated primary care is imperative to achieving a stronger, higher-performing healthcare system.
Underinvestment in primary care gives rise to patient access and workforce issues. A significant financial incentive for physicians and other clinicians to choose other areas of specialty undermines primary care.
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Source | Date |
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Gov. Jay Inslee at WSU medical school: Primary care ‘fundamental’ | The Spokesman-Review | June 8, 2019 |
HCCI Study Shows Stagnant Primary Care Investment | JAMA Network | December 13, 2019 |
Investing more in primary care could lower health spending — if patients would go along | Dallas Morning News | February 18, 2020 |
JAMA Forum: Progress in Primary Care—From Alma-Ata to Astana | JAMA | October 3, 2018 |
Limited Primary Care Access Leads to Poor Outcomes, High Spending | Patient Engagement HIT | February 6, 2020 |
Making New York City a primary care town | City & State New York | October 2, 2018 |
Michigan's Medicaid expansion doubles access to primary care | American Medical Association | January 27, 2020 |
More High-Value Care Associated With Receipt of Primary Care | HealthDay | February 11, 2019 |
National Meeting on Increasing Investment in Primary Care | FMAHealth | November 26, 2018 |
No More Lip Service; It’s Time We Fixed Primary Care (Part Two) | Health Affairs Blog | November 21, 2018 |