Patients defined as high-effort by their primary care physicians, not all of whom were medically complex, appear to have a high burden of psychosocial issues that may not be accounted for in current chronic disease-focused risk adjustment approaches https:
Defining Team Effort Involved in Patient Care from the Primary Care Physician’s Perspective. Una interesante aproximación a la complejidad desde la perspectiva del equipo de atención primaria. https://t.co/5rpPZx39qa https://t.co/Bog9wkG6Bn
RT @jeffreylinder: High-effort patients may not be medically complex, not accounted for in current risk-adjustment approaches https://t.co/…
RT @jeffreylinder: High-effort patients may not be medically complex, not accounted for in current risk-adjustment approaches https://t.co/…
Investing in relationships and teams to support managing complexity via @JournalGIM https://t.co/TktnAgsxFC
RT @SwensonTami: important consideration in risk adjusting claims data: https://t.co/tF42Bs3W5H
RT @jeffreylinder: High-effort patients may not be medically complex, not accounted for in current risk-adjustment approaches https://t.co/…
RT @jeffreylinder: High-effort patients may not be medically complex, not accounted for in current risk-adjustment approaches https://t.co/…
RT @jeffreylinder: High-effort patients may not be medically complex, not accounted for in current risk-adjustment approaches https://t.co/…
High-effort patients may not be medically complex, not accounted for in current risk-adjustment approaches https://t.co/EE5V7euVO3 https://t.co/XobzRHVeO7