Implementing a Patient-Centered Medical Home on Mount Desert Island

Citation:

Kane, N.M. & Madden, S.L., 2013. Implementing a Patient-Centered Medical Home on Mount Desert Island, Harvard Business Publishing: Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health case collection.

Abstract:

This case presents organizational challenges facing a physician champion of the Patient-Centered Medical Home (PCMH). Dr. Julian Kuffler, working with his employer, the Mount Desert Island Hospital System (MDI), hoped to persuade the primary care physicians in the system to embrace the PCMH care model. Physician resistance was strongly opposed to some of the key principles of PCMH, such as managing the health of a defined population, standardizing chronic care management protocols, delegating patient care tasks to non-physician members of a care team, and to having strong physician leadership at the system level. At the same time, MDI was a small rural “critical access hospital” with declining admissions, predominantly outpatient-based revenues, and deteriorating finances. MDI leadership viewed high quality primary care to be essential for MDI to be able to attract the best health system partner with which it could affiliate to become part of a larger, more financially viable organization. MDI leadership also hoped to find a partner that could also support its participation in new population health arrangements such as accountable care organizations.

Available from Harvard Business Publishing

Teaching note: Available
Teaching note author: Kane, Nancy M.
Last updated on 04/03/2019