What is the optimal panel size in primary care? a systematic review

In 2009, the Veterans Health Administration Handbook 1101.02 established a baseline panel size of 1,200 patients for a full-time physician in a Patient Aligned Care Team (PACT). This number could be adjusted up or down based on availability of support staff, the number of examination rooms, and pati...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Shekelle, Paul G.
Corporate Authors: United States Department of Veterans Affairs, West Los Angeles VA Medical Center Evidence-Based Synthesis Program Center
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Washington, DC Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans Health Administration, Health Services Research & Development Service August 2019, 2019
Series:Evidence synthesis program
Subjects:
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Collection: National Center for Biotechnology Information - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
Description
Summary:In 2009, the Veterans Health Administration Handbook 1101.02 established a baseline panel size of 1,200 patients for a full-time physician in a Patient Aligned Care Team (PACT). This number could be adjusted up or down based on availability of support staff, the number of examination rooms, and patient complexity. After adjustment for these factors, panels ranged from 1,000 to 1,400. Veterans Health Administration (VHA) Directive 1406 reaffirmed both the baseline panel numbers and adjustment parameters. Determining the right or optimal panel size for a full-time physician and team is a complex undertaking, balancing the demands of the system (patient access to care, clinical effectiveness or quality, patient experience, and cost) with the needs of the provider team (physician/team satisfaction, adequate time for care, and avoidance of physician/team burnout). The standard method for determining panel size has been a function of multiplying a provider's available slots each day by the number of days in clinic divided by the average number of visits each patient will make each year. But this method does not account for the tasks that occur outside of traditional face-to-face clinical visit, including patient communication (letter writing, telephone calls, emails, and form completion), test follow-up, panel management activities, and care coordination. To help inform an expert panel that will consider issues about determining VA primary care panel size, we were asked to conduct a systematic review of the literature
Physical Description:1 PDF file (v, 56 pages) illustrations