Team-Based Care

What Do Patients Think?

Ridie Ghezzi was dealing with depression. Her doctor tried her on one medication, then another, then changed her dose, but it just wasn’t working for her. So she called Amanda Rice, the behavioral health specialist at Dartmouth Health Connect in Hanover, NH, where Ghezzi is a patient.
 
Rice immediately contacted Ghezzi’s primary care doctor – also at Dartmouth Health Connect – who called Ghezzi that day. The phone conversation was long and unhurried. During the call, the doctor decided to change Ghezzi’s prescription, and she made an appointment to meet with Ghezzi, her health coach, and the behavioral health specialist as a team the next month.
 
“I felt like the wagons had surrounded me in protection,” Ghezzi recalled.

A same-day call back from a doctor? A long phone conversation? An appointment with three health professionals in the room at the same time? If this doesn’t sound like a typical interaction with the health care system, it’s because Dartmouth Health Connect is not a typical clinic. Its team-based model of care strikes a stark contrast to the solo doctor-does-all, seven-minute-visit model that most patients know (and few love).
 
By design, team-based practices, also called patient-centered medical homes, have the potential to redistribute provider workload, change the way health care providers get paid, and – in the best cases – put patients at the center of it all. Providers have many reasons to love the model of care, but what do patients think?

Go to top