From Health Affairs Today <[email protected]>
Subject What Zero-Burnout Primary Care Practices Have In Common
Date June 10, 2021 8:03 PM
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The Latest Research, Commentary, And News From Health Affairs

Thursday, June 10, 2021

Dear John,

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A Look Inside The Primary Care Practices Preventing Physician Burnout

Physician burnout was a challenge for many hospitals far before it was
exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic.

As part of our Practice of Medicine series
, Samuel
Edwards and coauthors investigated burnout in primary care practices

for an article in the June 2021 issue of Health Affairs.

The authors found that solo practice status, clinician ownership, and
not participating in external initiatives (such as accountable care
organizations or the Transforming Clinical Practice Initiative) are
associated with zero-burnout status, suggesting that "agency is a
protective factor for organizational and professional well-being."

Further, the authors reported that zero-burnout practices have a culture
"in which teamwork, communication, psychological safety, mindfulness of
others, facilitative leadership, and understanding that people make and
can learn from mistakes" are key attributes.

Edwards joined A Health Podyssey this week to discuss this research
.

Today on Health Affairs Blog, Linda Richter and coauthors argue that we
must measure and document the potential effects of broad anti-addiction
legislation on youth substance use

and addiction.

In the second of their two-post series, Hannah Crook and coauthors
discuss the lessons that can be learned regarding the maturity and
refinement of value-based payment models
.

Also, Rachel Sachs considers how the FDA's decision to approve Aduhelm

for Alzheimer's has the potential to reshape many different aspects of
health care policy.

In a new GrantWatch post
,
MaKaya Saulsberry and coauthors discuss recent efforts by the New York
State Health Foundation to expand OpenNotes, an initiative aiming to
give patients and their caregivers access to the notes written by
physicians, nurses, or other clinicians.

Elevating Voices: Pride Month: In a Health Affairs article from October
2017, Ning Hsieh and Matt Ruther found that, despite increased insurance
coverage, nonwhite sexual minorities experience disparities in access to
care
.

For more emerging health policy research and insights, visit the June
2021 issue and
subscribe to Health Affairs .

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Your Daily Digest

Cultural And Structural Features Of Zero-Burnout Primary Care Practices

Samuel T. Edwards et al.

Podcast: Features Of A Zero-Burnout Primary Care Practice

Alan Weil and Samuel Edwards

Recent Legislation Can Dramatically Improve Substance Use Prevention:
Here's How To Seize The Opportunity

Linda Richter et al.

A Decade Of Value-Based Payment: Lessons Learned And Implications For
The Centers For Medicare And Medicaid Innovation, Part 2

Hannah L. Crook et al.

The FDA's Approval Of Aduhelm: Potential Implications Across A Wide
Range Of Health Policy Issues And Stakeholders

Rachel Sachs

Empowering Patients Through Shared Visit Notes

MaKaya Saulsberry et al.

Despite Increased Insurance Coverage, Nonwhite Sexual Minorities Still
Experience Disparities In Access To Care

Ning Hsieh and Matt Ruther

HEALTH AFFAIRS BRANDED POST:
The orchestrators, integrators, and platform players that will redefine
future healthcare ecosystems

By Sundar Subramanian et al.
Paid for by PwC

 

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About Health Affairs

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, and Health Affairs Sunday
Update .  

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published Health Affairs since 1981.

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