How MIH-CP Supports the Quadruple Aim
The Institute for Healthcare Improvement’s (IHI) Triple Aim is a framework for how the health care system can approach optimal health system performance. The Quadruple Aim adds an additional focus on addressing health care provider burnout.
Improved Population Health
Improved Population Health
MIH-CP programs and practitioners actively improve the health of their patient populations through multiple means, including patient education, medication review, chronic disease management, preventive care and assistance with patient self-management. Delivery of these services takes place in a patient’s home, a point-of-view not available during traditional care delivered in a clinic or hospital setting.
Improved Experience of Care
Improved Experience of Care
MIH-CP programs and practitioners deliver patient-centered care, in the patient’s own home. This has resulted in average patient satisfaction survey ratings in excess of 95 percent, with reported improved scores on patient quality-of-life surveys.
Improved Per Capita Cost of Care
Improved Per Capita Cost of Care
The 2017 NAEMT MIH-CP Survey noted that MIH-CP programs and practitioners reported 79 percent reductions in hospital readmissions and 75 percent reductions in EMS high-utilizer call volume. When calculated together with per-event ambulance transport, emergency department (ED) and hospital admission costs, this translates to each program having the potential to save its local health care system multiple millions of dollars annually.
Reduction of Workforce Burden
Reduction of Workforce Burden
MIH-CP programs and practitioners work collaboratively with physicians to shift a portion of the physician’s non-clinical and clinical workload to non-physician providers, working under physician supervision and direction. Additionally, MIH-CP programs result in improved ED and Primary Care capacity, leaving physicians with more face-to-face clinical time with their patients.