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Safety-Net Providers in Some U.S. Communities Have Increasingly Embraced Coordinated Care Models

August 2012
Health Affairs, Vol. 31, No. 8
Peter J. Cunningham, Laurie E. Felland, Lucy B. Stark

Safety net organizations, which provide health services to uninsured and low-income people, increasingly are looking for ways to coordinate services among providers to improve access to and quality of care and to reduce costs. This analysis, a part of the Community Tracking Study, examined trends in safety net coordination activities from 2000 to 2010 within 12 communities in the United States and found a notable increase in such activities. Six of the 12 communities had made formal efforts to link uninsured people to medical homes and coordinate care with specialists in 2010, compared to only two communities in 2000. The study also identified key attributes of safety net coordinated care systems, such as reliance on a medical home for meeting patients’ primary care needs, and lingering challenges to safety net integration, such as competition among hospitals and community health centers for Medicaid patients.

Access to this article is available at the Health Affairs Web site. (Free Access to this article is available until Aug. 6, 2013. Note: Link to Health Affairs not supported on mobile devices.)

 

 

 


 

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The Center for Studying Health System Change Ceased operation on Dec. 31, 2013.