Value-based Care: Caring for Patients
Online CME
Learn how to deliver high-quality, cost-effective care while maintaining a patient-centered approach—and get paid appropriately for it, too.
Value-based care models are designed to give you room to flex your coordination and continuity skills to achieve highly effective patient care. When you know how to fully integrate the principles of value-based care into practice, you optimize care quality and simultaneously keep costs low.
Enhance patient care, streamline processes and improve overall practice efficiency as you successfully transition into a value-based care practice model.
- Advance care planning
- Team care
- Behavioral health integration
- Continuity
- Transforming chronic care
Learn how to deliver high-quality, cost-effective care while maintaining a patient-centered approach—and get paid appropriately for it, too.
Value-based care models are designed to give you room to flex your coordination and continuity skills to achieve highly effective patient care. When you know how to fully integrate the principles of value-based care into practice, you optimize care quality and simultaneously keep costs low.
Enhance patient care, streamline processes and improve overall practice efficiency as you successfully transition into a value-based care practice model.
- Advance care planning
- Team care
- Behavioral health integration
- Continuity
- Transforming chronic care
Learning Objectives
Recognize the value of discussing advanced care planning and its benefit to patients and their family.
Utilize advanced care documents to best honor patients' goals of care.
Create conversation starters and helpful dialogue to initiate goals of care conversations.
Using evidence-based research, examine effective strategies for building and leading integrated care teams.
Review the stages of team development and how to form, hire and grow a care team at each stage.
Gain tools and strategies for continually and effectively evaluating the team's success and impact on patient outcomes.
List the key elements of the CoCM model, outcomes to expect and strengths and/or limitations.
Explore how a patient flows through a clinic with CoCM to learn the mechanics.
Discuss examples on common challenges to implementing this in your clinic and ways to work around those challenges.
Explain the importance of continuity for the patient and care team experience.
Define continuity from the patient perspective and the clinical team perspective.
Sessions with details
Advance Care Planning and the Role of Family Medicine
David B. Brecher, MD, FAAFP, FAAHPM
Building and Leading the Integrated Care Team
Andrew Valeras DO, MPH, FAAFP; Mark Williams, MD; Parinda Khatri, PhD
Collaborative Model Case Studies
Mark Williams, MD; Sarah Coles, MD, FAAFP; Robin Schreur, BS, RN, CCM
Continuity: Understanding Panels and How To Manage Them
Stacey Bartell, MD
This session is supported by a generous grant from Ardmore Institute of Health.
Don’t Go It Alone–Success Requires Community-Based Solutions
Andrew Valeras DO, MPH, FAAFP; Mark Williams, MD; Santina Wheat, MD, MPH, FAAFP PhD
Empanelment: Connecting Patients and Care Teams in a Robust and Meaningful Way Through Empanelment Workflows and Communication
Stacey Bartell, MD
This session is supported by a generous grant from Ardmore Institute of Health.
Improving Access
Stacey Bartell, MD
This session is supported by a generous grant from Ardmore Institute of Health.
Improving Adherence to Prescribed Medications
Stacey Bartell, MD
Developed in collaboration with UCSF Center for Excellence in Primary Care (CEPC) and the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP).
It Starts With “Why:” Understanding and Engaging Your Patients
Elizabeth Polk, MD, FAAFP, dipABLM, RYT-500
Making the Case for Change
Andrew Valeras DO, MPH, FAAFP; Mark Williams, MD; Jennifer Thomas, MD
Optimizing Care Coordination Services To Transition to Value-based Payment
Jennifer McKenny, MD, FAAFP
Pills to Prevention: Transforming Chronic Condition Care
Karyn Springer, MD
This session is supported by a generous grant from Ardmore Institute of Health.
Primary Care Behavioral Health Model Case Studies
Andrew Valeras DO, MPH, FAAFP; Jeff Reiter, PhD
Proactive Care: how Is It Different for Teams and Patients
Timothy L. Switaj, MD, MBA, MHA, CPE, FACHE, FAAFP
This session is supported by a generous grant from Ardmore Institute of Health.
Residency–Program Directors and Residents
Joseph Wiedemer, MD, FAAFP; Nancy Ruddy, PhD
The “In-Between Spaces:” Management of the Patient Outside of a Visit
Amy Scanlan, MD
The State of the U.S. Integrated Behavioral Health Landscape
Andrew Valeras DO, MPH, FAAFP; Mark Williams, MD; Jessica Kenny, PhD; Neftali Serrano, PsyD
Towards Health Equity: Health-quality, Whole-person Care for the Medically Vulnerable
Brent K Sugimoto, MD, MPH, FAAFP
We Call Them Patients, You Call Them Members: Working Together To Improve the Health of Individuals
Vinita Magoon, DO, JD, MPH, MBA