Minutes
of Meeting, May 7-8, 2008
Advisory Committee
Members Present
Lolita M. McDavid, MD, MPA, Chair
Perri Morgan, PhD, PA-C, Vice Chair
Lauren L. Patton, DDS, Vice Chair
James F. Cawley, MPH, PA-C
Diego Chaves-Gnecco, MD,
MPH
William Alton Curry, MD
Kevin J. Donly, DDS, MS
Sanford J. Fenton, DDS, MDS
Katherine A. Flores, MD
Karen A. Gunter, MS, PA-C
Bonnie Head, MD
Sheila H. Koh, DDS, RN
Eugene Mochan, DO, PhD
Charles P. Mouton, MD, MS
Joseph L. Price, PhD
Barbara J. Turner, MD, MSEd
Surendra K. Varma, MD
Others Present
Marilyn Biviano, PhD, Director, Division of Medicine and Dentistry
Jerilyn K. Glass, MD, PhD, Acting Executive Secretary, Advisory Committee
Wednesday,
May 7, 2008
The Advisory Committee
on Training in Primary Care Medicine and Dentistry (Advisory Committee)
convened its meeting at 8:40 a.m. at the Hilton Rockville Executive
Meeting Center, 1750
Rockville Pike, Rockville, MD 20852.
At the opening of the meeting, Lolita M. McDavid, MD, Chair, said that
the business of the day would be work on the Advisory Committee’s seventh
report. After members introduced themselves, Dr. McDavid introduced
Marilyn Biviano, PhD, Director of HRSA’s Division of Medicine and Dentistry,
who applauded the Committee’s work on the medical/dental home concept.
She provided an update on recent Bureau meetings including its All Programs
Meeting in February 2008 and the Council on Graduate Medical Education
(COGME) which has completed reports on new paradigms for physician training
and greater flexibility in graduate medical education.
Barbara
J. Turner, MD, Co-Chair of the Seventh Report Writing Group, presented
the work done by the Writing Group since the last meeting. She raised
the issue of cost as it relates to the medical/dental home concept and
said that it was important the Advisory Committee not promise that implementation
of the medical/dental home concept is going to be a solution to the
Nation’s economic crisis in health care. She urged an examination of
the needed underpinnings in training if the concept is to be successfully
taught. She believed that the report needed more reality in the discussion
on principles underlying the medical/dental home concept. The Advisory
Committee decided to include a matrix in the report that would align
medical home principles with the Accreditation Council for Graduate
Medical Education (ACGME) competencies. William Curry, M.D. and Surendra
Varma, M.D. agreed to work on such the matrix. Perri Morgan, Ph.D.,
PA-C urged a broader focus on primary care so that dentistry is not
forgotten. Dr. McDavid stressed that the report should indicate why
Title VII, section 747 funds are so important and how those funds are
used.
Among the Advisory
Committee’s suggested changes for the draft seventh report were clarification
that the seven principles of the medical/dental home be viewed as an
ideal vision rather than a guaranteed solution, less emphasis on the
potential cost savings of a medical/dental home because the cost may
be more initially, and added discussion on the obesity epidemic and
its association with chronic illness. Other suggestions included the
addition of information on income gaps between primary care physicians
and specialists within the context of a projected physician shortage
in primary care, more evidence for prevention and what preventive care
means in terms of cost savings, and a new section on the effectiveness
of multidisciplinary teams.
In discussing the
recommendations, the Advisory Committee stressed that the Nation needs
to strengthen the primary care base of the health care system. It felt
that an expansion in funding was needed for demonstration projects that
incorporate team approaches to health care. It stressed that any solution
to the shortage of primary care providers will require a solution to
the overwhelming debt that medical, dental, and physician assistant
students have when they graduate from training programs. Several members
offered additional recommendations for consideration. The members reviewed
and made changes to the wording of the various recommendations.
The plan is to have
the Seventh Report Writing Group continue its work via conference call
through the summer and once it is ready, have it sent out for public
comment.
The Advisory Committee
took up the topic of the next report. The eighth report was seen as
building on the seventh report by focusing on the redesign of primary
care delivery. The medical/dental home would be just one way of redesigning
primary care. As pointed out by Dr. McDavid, primary care is the “door
to all of medicine” because it is the primary care physician, physician
assistant, and dentist who most often see a patient first and determine
whether a referral is in order.
With a growing shortage
of primary care physicians and the increasing prevalence of chronic
disease, there is a demand for a new model of health care delivery.
Heightened attention is being focused on primary care’s role in a new
system and the appropriate training of primary care health professionals
to meet new responsibilities. The key question becomes how training,
especially Title VII, section 747, will respond to the redesign in primary
care. The Advisory Committee sees the strengthening of Title VII, section
747 training as the centerpiece of its eighth report because Title VII,
section 747 is the engine for making a change in the way medicine and
dentistry are practiced. This training will address evidence-based
medicine and practice, the new role of information technology, reimbursement
issues and reform, prevention, and training in how to work in an interdisciplinary
manner.
The members who
volunteered to serve on the Eighth Report Writing Group were Katherine
Flores, M.D., Dr. Morgan, Dr. Varma, Dr. Curry, and Eugene Mochan, D.O.,
Ph.D.
During the public
comment period, Stephen Shannon, D.O., President of the American Association
of Colleges of Osteopathic Medicine urged the Advisory Committee to
collaborate with other groups to focus attention on the policy issues
surrounding the health care workforce. He suggested attention on primary
care training for a health care world in a time of shortage.
The meeting adjourned
at 4:13 p.m.
The following day,
May 8, the Advisory Committee joined the members of three other advisory
committees within the Bureau of Health Professions for an All Advisory
Committee Meeting.