The Problem
The Solution: The Accountable Physician Practice 
What Makes Accountable Coordinated Health Care Better?
Our Vision For The Future of Health Care
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Evidence: Making The Case
Employer and Community Partners with Physician Organizations


The Council of Accountable Physician Practices (CAPP) is a joint undertaking by some of the nation's largest and most prominent physician practices.

CAPP physician groups are striving to promote a health care system that is more accountable to patients, consumers, and purchasers. We believe that accountability in medicine is more than a promise of high quality health care. It is a commitment to excellence in every important facet of the care experience, as judged by our patients, clinicians, and purchasers.

 
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“CAPP’s 35 MSMGs [multispecialty medical groups] share a common vision as learning organizations dedicated to the improvement of clinical care. Their features include physician leadership and governance; commitment to evidence-based care management processes; well-developed quality improvement systems; team-based care; the use of advance clinical information technology; and the collection, analysis, and distribution of clinical performance information. These features are congruent with the [Institute of Medicine’s] recommendations on key elements needed to redesign delivery systems.”

From Chapter 5, “Developing the Test Bed—Linking Integrated Service Delivery Systems: Council of Accountable Physician Practices,” by Michael A. Mustile, MD. The Learning Healthcare System: Workshop Summary (IOM Roundtable on Evidence-Based Medicine), edited by LeighAnne Olsen, Dara Aisner, and J. Michael McGinnis, National Academies Press, 2007.

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“A shift from the current care model to a more coordinated care model centered on primary care is one potential way to help stave off the healthcare dilemma.”

“It's too expensive to be a primary-care doctor,” by Debra A. Geihsler, president and CEO of Harvard Vanguard Medical Associates & Atrius Health. Boston Globe, July 25, 2007.

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Medicare Payment Advisory Committee’s March 2007 Report to the Congress: “In three of the four [metropolitan statistical] areas, beneficiaries whose main physician was in multispecialty or hospital-affiliated groups had lower average annual spending than beneficiaries whose main physician was in solo or single-specialty groups. At the highest quintile of spending, all four areas show lower average spending for beneficiaries whose main physicians were in multispecialty or hospital-affiliated groups.”

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© 2008 Council of Accountable Physician Practices. CAPP is a 501(c)(6) organization affiliated with AMGA’s 501(c)(3) foundation. Updated 04/24/2008.