JMIR J Med Internet Res Journal of Medical Internet Research 1438-8871 JMIR Publications Toronto, Canada v26i1e60081 39405512 10.2196/60081 Viewpoint Viewpoint Primary Care Informatics: Vitalizing the Bedrock of Health Care Eysenbach Gunther Little Dave Hoyt Bob You Jacqueline Guan-Ting MD 1 2 https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2562-7526 Leung Tiffany I MD, MPH 3 4 https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6007-4023 Pandita Deepti MD 5 https://orcid.org/0009-0007-2791-2738 Sakumoto Matthew MD 6
Department of Medicine University of California San Francisco 533 Parnassus Avenue, U127 San Francisco, CA, 94143 United States 1 4154761000 [email protected]
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8192-471X
Clinical Informatics Mass General Brigham Somerville, MA United States Department of Medicine Brigham and Women's Hospital Boston, MA United States Department of Internal Medicine (adjunct) Southern Illinois University School of Medicine Springfield, IL United States JMIR Publications, Inc. Toronto, ON Canada Department of Medicine University of California Irvine Irvine, CA United States Department of Medicine University of California San Francisco San Francisco, CA United States Corresponding Author: Matthew Sakumoto [email protected] 2024 15 10 2024 26 e60081 30 4 2024 11 5 2024 16 7 2024 31 8 2024 ©Jacqueline Guan-Ting You, Tiffany I Leung, Deepti Pandita, Matthew Sakumoto. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (https://www.jmir.org), 15.10.2024. 2024

This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (ISSN 1438-8871), is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on https://www.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.

Primary care informatics (PCI) professionals address workflow and technology solutions in a wide spectrum of health, ranging from optimizing the experience of the individual patient in the clinic room to supporting the health of populations and augmenting the work of frontline primary care clinical teams. PCI overlaps uniquely with 2 disciplines with an impact on societal health—primary care and health informatics. Primary care is a gateway to health care access and aims to synthesize and coordinate numerous, complex elements of patients’ health and medical care in a holistic manner. However, over the past 25 years, primary care has become a specialty in crisis: in a post–COVID-19 world, workforce shortages, clinician burnout, and continuing challenges in health care access all contribute to difficulties in sustaining primary care. Informatics professionals are poised to change this trajectory. In this viewpoint, we aim to inform readers of the discipline of PCI and its importance in the design, support, and maintenance of essential primary care services. Although this work focuses on primary care in the United States, which includes general internal medicine, family medicine, and pediatrics (and depending on definition, includes specialties such as obstetrics and gynecology), many of the principles outlined can also be applied to comparable health care services and settings in other countries. We highlight (1) common global challenges in primary care, (2) recent trends in the evolution of PCI (personalized medicine, population health, social drivers of health, and team-based care), and (3) opportunities to move forward PCI with current and emerging technologies using the 4Cs of primary care framework. In summary, PCI offers important contributions to health care and the informatics field, and there are many opportunities for informatics professionals to enhance the primary care experience for patients, families, and their care teams.

health care delivery primary care primary health care primary prevention quality of health care holistic care holistic medicine people-centric care person-centric care medical informatics applications primary care informatics medical informatics health informatics information science data science
Introduction Introduction to Primary Care

Primary care is defined by the World Health Organization as “a model of care that supports first-contact, accessible, continuous, comprehensive and coordinated person-focused care” while achieving equitable access to care and emphasizing population health [1]. Primary care is one of the only sections of health care shown to have positive impacts on health outcomes and population health, emphasizing its fundamental role in the health and well-being of the public [2]. Primary care specialties can include internal medicine, family medicine, and pediatrics [3,4]; some definitions also include obstetrics and gynecology [5,6].

Primary care is the backbone of health care and is crucial to the health of populations. One international survey indicates that about 75% of respondents had a usual source of primary care [7]. Recent US data indicate that 55% of public insurance (Medicaid) beneficiaries primarily visited primary care clinicians and 36% of patients predominantly visited specialists [8]. Having a usual source of care, such as primary care, is associated with increased preventive screenings such as blood pressure measurements and diabetes and cholesterol screening [7]. Access to primary care has been correlated with lower avoidable hospitalization rates [9]. Loss of primary care has been associated with increased utilization of specialty, urgent care, and emergency care among older adults [10].

Stange et al [11] refer to primary care as an essential bridge between the health of individuals and population health, “situated at the unsettled boundary region between the messy but meaningful lives of individuals, families, and communities, and the health care, public health, and social systems designed to support them.” Areas where primary care can collaborate with public health and play a role in population health include but are not limited to chronic disease management, communicable diseases, and maternal-child health [12]. This role as a mediator also includes facilitating care with medical specialists and social services [13]. Because of its unique position in facilitating numerous interactions between different parties, primary care serves as a central hub for various data streams and care workflows; informatics solutions in this discipline therefore must match the field’s unique needs.

Introduction to Primary Care Informatics

Primary care informatics (PCI) augments the crucial work that primary care provides to populations. In 2003, the Primary Care Informatics Working Group under the American Medical Informatics Association defined PCI as the “application of information technology to improve the practice, education, and research of primary care, and the development of informatics tools appropriate for primary care practice” [14]. At the time, PCI was emerging globally to address the use of technology in areas such as chronic disease management. de Lusignan [15] argued that PCI was not just a discipline of technology but rather a “science” dedicated to the promotion of “patient-centered primary medical care” with a biopsychosocial model of health; PCI was distinct from other areas of health informatics due to the use of heuristics-based clinical management and patient-centered consultations. The Primary Care Informatics Working Group of the International Medical Informatics Association was formed in the early 2000s [15], with the aims of addressing real-world primary care data and ontologies for research; technology integration in primary care; and ethical, legal, and social issues related to primary care [16].

PCI professionals bring unique expertise at the nexus of primary care and informatics, well before the COVID-19 pandemic. We define PCI professionals as inclusive of clinicians, researchers, technology professionals, experts, and others who engage in PCI. A few examples of PCI issues included the impact of electronic health records (EHRs) on primary care [17-19], benefits of health information exchanges in primary care [20], evidence on health care workers’ perceptions of mobile health in primary care [21], and risks and benefits of artificial intelligence (AI) in primary care [22]. The COVID-19 pandemic put a spotlight on the central role of primary care clinicians globally to mobilize and continue to provide access to care and public health care services to populations all over the world during lockdowns and additional restrictions. PCI professionals rapidly deployed and scaled up telehealth visits and identified and addressed inequities in the digital divide (such as those due to internet access) [23]. Telehealth and telemedicine positively impacted primary care by providing improvements in key areas including continuity, accessibility, care coordination, comprehensiveness, access, better appointment times, and efficiency [24]. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, additional opportunities were highlighted to further strengthen systems, including vaccination and disease prevention, disease management, public health surveillance, and pandemic preparedness [25].

In this viewpoint paper, we highlight issues uniquely serviced by PCI, distinct from health informatics as a whole, discussing aspects of PCI that have evolved since the early 2000s to mark the 25th anniversary of JMIR Publications and the Journal of Medical Internet Research. In particular, in the wake of COVID-19, there have been changes to primary care practice pertinent to PCI, including challenges to clinician well-being and digital health transformation in domains such as telehealth [26].

Common Challenges in Primary Care

Challenges may vary for different regions of the same country; for example, in the United States, access to primary care for adults [27,28] and pediatric patients [28] is more challenging in rural than urban settings. Differences in primary care worldwide range from physician consultation time [29] to funding and structure [30]. Countries and geographic regions have different needs in primary care—for example, Japan has universal health care and an aging population with challenges around chronic disease management [31], while in sub-Saharan Africa, the disease burden consists of both chronic diseases as well as infectious diseases [32]. In many primary care practices, unlike most specialties, outcomes are addressed at both the individual patient and population levels; at times, these perspectives are not always aligned, for example, when individual values or beliefs may differ from the population or public health recommendations, or when guidelines do not fit a patient’s clinical presentation or health conditions. Yet, the responsibility of addressing these differences in shared decision-making can fall to primary care clinicians to reconcile with patients.

A recent report on US primary care identified the lack of usability and interoperability of digital health tools as barriers to health care organizations and clinicians unlocking the full possibilities of health information technology—“real potentials of digital health to aggregate a wide array of medical, environmental, biological, and social data; make meaningful sense of information; automate care; make care proactive and not reactive; enhance health equity; and enable population health monitoring and management have been barely explored” [2]. Similarly, recent international physician survey data suggest the majority of primary care physicians are not able to adequately coordinate care with specialists and hospitals [33], in part due to poor data access and communication, a gap that PCI professionals can help address.

Also, there are troubling themes in recent primary care challenges that cross borders, such as clinician burnout [34], aging populations [31], chronic disease prevalence [32], significant administrative work [35], and mismatch of patient demand and clinician supply [32], which in turn threaten the health of communities globally. However, the authors are optimistic that greater awareness of the opportunities and changes possible through intentional applications of PCI, building on the last 25 years of evidence-based advancements and development in the field, can pave the way forward for continued primary care, and consequently, overall health system improvements. The authors share perspectives reflecting their current and prior primary care experience in the United States, Europe, and Asia, although they expect that some themes described may be applicable to certain health care systems and settings elsewhere.

Evolution of PCI Overview

PCI has evolved to address some of these new challenges. de Lusignan [15] highlighted 3 core areas of PCI, including heuristic decision-making, patient-centered care, and the biopsychosocial model. Building on the principles de Lusignan [15] highlighted, recent trends in primary care with PCI at its core include personalized medicine, analytics- and data-driven population health, social drivers of health, and team-based care. Heuristic-based care is now bolstered by point-of-care analytics and data-driven decisions derived from population health analytics; patient-centered care is informed by personalized medicine; and the biopsychosocial model is strengthened by improved awareness and screening of social determinants. The planted seeds of PCI in the early 2000s have grown and flourished with new technologies and new models of primary care.

Personalized Medicine, Augmented Personalized Decision-Making, and Customization of Care

Primary care clinicians often engage in shared decision-making—described in one model as a four-step process of (1) recognizing the opportunity to make a decision with patient and clinician, (2) introducing a decision aid, (3) having a conversation, and (4) receiving care [36]. This decision-making allows for more personalized and arguably patient-centered care. Personalized medicine has the potential to provide new resources and tools to facilitate shared decision-making.

The growth of genetics knowledge has offered new opportunities to consider how genomic medicine may potentially be integrated into primary care—for example, a real-world pilot with large gene sequencing panels in primary care [37] versus the integration of genetics counselors into primary care teams [38]. Furthermore, the nexus of precision medicine and AI will enable improved care—such as more precise medication dosing, improved treatment recommendations based on comorbidities, or improved risk prediction for diseases [39]—areas in which PCI professionals can inform research and subsequent practical implementation. AI also has the potential to blur the lines between personalized medicine and population health—for example, with precision population analytics, creating “precision cohorts” similar to a primary care clinician’s patients can help better inform which treatment option to use based on population-level data [40].

Digital health tools, such as wearables and mobile health apps, can provide patient-centered insights and shift primary care toward proactive yet targeted “precision prevention” [41]. These technologies can drive customized care with shared decision-making and allow primary care to pivot toward primary prevention and not just chronic disease management. Along with the personalized treatment of health conditions, patients are better able to customize their care experience; patients are more empowered to access care flexibly outside of brick-and-mortar clinics through mediums such as telehealth [42] and patient portal messages [43].

Population-Based Approach Driven by Big Data and Analytics

Primary care is uniquely positioned to become a potential hub for better management of the vast amounts of unused health care data across clinical settings. Each hospital produces an average of 50 petabytes of data annually with an estimated 97% of data remaining unused [44]. EHRs, wearables, and other technologies have expanded modalities [45] and the volume of health data [46]. Health information exchanges can augment the data of individual systems, powering descriptive, predictive, and prescriptive analytics to facilitate quality, improved risk management and clinical decision-making at the population level [47]. Primary care, where longitudinal chronic care and multidisease management take place, can be a vital central hub for patient and population health data. Wagner’s [48] widely adopted chronic care model includes information systems as a core component of providing high-quality chronic disease care. Data-driven improvement using computer-based systems is also considered a building block for a high-performing primary care practice [49]. While extensive research on predictive machine learning has been performed in areas such as cardiac disease, mental health, communicable diseases, and perinatal outcomes, work needs to be done to take into account model usability in the real world [50], as well as practical considerations such as external validation for pragmatic clinical decision-making [51].

Furthermore, as technologies, like generative AI, are implemented across health care [52,53], PCI professionals have and continue to lead the charge in steering the primary care and informatics communities toward equitable [54-56] and ethical [57] approaches to implementing these technologies. For example, experts spanning PCI, policy, bioethics, and philosophy for the largest US medical specialty organization [58] recently called for ethical, accountable, equitable, transparent, and environmentally aware use of AI in health care [59]. PCI professionals can advocate for appropriate safeguards balanced with clinically reasonable regulations to avoid some of the pitfalls associated with current EHR administrative work [60].

Population health can encompass chronic disease management—examples of PCI initiatives in this area include chronic care management and remote patient monitoring programs, which provide continuous support across the care continuum [61]. Remote patient monitoring is most often applied in chronic disease management for cardiology, endocrinology, pulmonary, and geriatrics care [62]; beyond expanding the interface modalities and underlying AI models [63] powering this technology, PCI can add value by improving the patient and clinician experience with these technologies [64]. Even as analytics and associated technologies for addressing population health continue to evolve, PCI professionals can help ground these technologies in a sociotechnical design or implementation approach with appropriate outcome measures (such as patient-reported outcome measures) [65].

Social Drivers of Health

As part of comprehensive, culturally sensitive, and patient-centered care, PCI professionals address social determinants of health (SDOH), also referred to as social drivers of health, in EHR design or improvements [66-68]. SDOH includes areas such as education, food, housing, income, and other nonmedical factors that contribute to health [69]. Recent attention to these drivers has advanced the traditional biopsychosocial model of care. The longitudinal relationship of patients with primary care clinicians, as opposed to the episodic nature of other specialties, allows for greater patient trust in disclosing SDOH information during primary care visits. Documenting and visualizing SDOH gaps increases the likelihood of addressing these factors that greatly impact patients’ well-being [70]. PCI professionals can identify and present resources to both patient and clinician, matching the right intervention with the right patient to maximize benefit to the patient and community.

Other examples of relevant determinants within SDOH also include commercial determinants of health (industry entities shaping health choices in areas such as food, alcohol, tobacco use, pharmaceuticals, and media consumption) [71,72]; political determinants of health (sociopolitical events correlating with disparities in health outcomes) [73]; and geographic location (using geographical information systems to measure disease incidence and prevalence, health risk, community access to health services, and community health profiling) [74]. In addition, health informatics researchers and PCI professionals play a role in addressing immigrant and refugee health, for example, in building appropriate record systems to accommodate the international needs of this vulnerable population [75]. There is a significant intersection between PCI and the emerging field of social informatics [66], which deals with data from a breadth of sources to advance social and medical care. Furthermore, as PCI implements patient-facing solutions (eg, in digital health), the field should aim for meaningful, equitable solutions built on community engagement [76], which can allow for culturally relevant informatics tools that engage and advocate for underrepresented populations [77].

Informatics to Enable Dynamic, Flexible Team-Based Care

Primary care teams can vary in composition but can include nurses, medical assistants, health coaches, behavioral health specialists, and pharmacists supporting primary care providers, often coupled with clinical workflows such as standing orders or protocols [78]. There is evidence that these team members can provide effective care in particular areas of primary care; for example, primary care nurses provide effective care in areas such as chronic disease management, care management, and health promotion [79]. Team-based primary care has been correlated with improved quality measures, such as depression and diabetes care adherence, and reduced emergency department visits and hospitalizations [80]. This team-based care is a key component of care management, supporting higher-risk patients with better disease management and care navigation; care management in turn is vital to promoting value-based-care—care that is patient-centered and improves clinical outcomes while avoiding unnecessary costs [81].

Health information technology has been shown to be an important part of effective team-based primary care. [82] For example, the advanced team-based care model integrates technology into a care team model with enhanced clinical workflows and roles, including a care team coordinator whose responsibilities include history taking during clinic visits, coordination of preventive health screenings, clinician-supervised laboratory test or order placement and documentation; this model improves patient outcomes such as cervical cancer screening and immunizations and allows physicians or advanced practice providers to focus on communication, clinical decision-making, and management of a greater number of health issues [83]. PCI professionals also can introduce new tools to team-based care such as secure messaging for interprofessional communication [84,85]. With increases in telehealth since the COVID-19 pandemic, PCI professionals have been core to establishing new care team models specific to telehealth, taking into account teams that are often remotely located [86].

Opportunities in PCI Overview

A broad range of digital health interventions for prevention in primary care exist, ranging from EHR-based solutions to telehealth, that have proven efficacy but have not been widely adopted or are primarily clinician facing [87,88]. We break down current and future state technologies that have the potential to transform the primary care experience.

We apply the 4Cs of primary care (alternatively known as the 4 tenets or 4 pillars of primary care) framework [89,90] to different domains and tasks encountered in primary care and map these domains and tasks to health informatics tools (Table 1). Some of these domains may encompass multiple pillars.

4Cs of primary care, primary care domains and tasks, and corresponding informatics tools or aspects.

4 Cs of primary care and primary care domain or task Health informatics tools or aspects
Contact
Patient engagement and patient education Mobile health apps, text messaging, telehealth, medical extended reality, personal health records, patient portals
Comprehensiveness
Chronic disease management Remote patient monitoring, EHRa design, telehealth visits, mobile health
Population health management Clinical decision support, machine learning analytics, disease registries
Social determinants of health Clinical decision support, EHR design
Coordination
Care team or clinician-clinician coordination Interoperability, EHR design, electronic consults
Documentation or administrative tasks Ambient listening documentation, generative AIb chart summarization
Population health management Precision population analytics, predictive analytics, health information exchange
Collaboration with public health Data aggregation, interoperability, data reporting, learning health systems
Continuity
Patient-clinician communication Patient portal messaging, telehealth

aEHR: electronic health record.

bAI: artificial intelligence.

Contact

The first C, contact, refers to patients accessing primary care services. With the necessitated movement to telemedicine and telehealth services during the COVID-19 pandemic, telehealth adoption among certain patients was rapid [91]. After the pandemic, there is much work to be done to address gaps in telehealth access, especially among those of lower socioeconomic status [42].

Health care systems must rethink how individuals access health care, and PCI practitioners are poised to bridge gaps in access and creatively engage patients in care. Text messaging for medication adherence in chronic diseases [92] and mobile health have engaged patients with chronic health conditions [93,94]. On the other hand, medical extended reality is a growing field overlapping with clinical informatics; its applications span from behavioral health to integration with procedural specialties [95]. Patient education is a key component of primary care visits; virtual reality has been studied for patient education [96], and in the future, could be a tool in PCI for patient education and engagement. Deep learning can also improve patient instructions by “translating” language to an appropriate reading or health literacy level [97]. While benchmarking suggests large language models’ multilingual functions do not perform well enough compared to commercial translation services [98], large language models could someday create high-quality multilingual patient education materials.

Comprehensiveness

The second C, comprehensiveness, refers to patient-centered management of the breadth of conditions and a balance of prevention and treatment.

To provide comprehensive care, primary care clinicians and other care team members must be able to find the right information for the right patient (or even groups of patients) at the right time. Interoperable and usable EHRs are key to timely and appropriate data access. However, current EHR usability is often poor and associated with clinician burnout [99]. Similarly, a recent survey of US family physicians demonstrates poor satisfaction with interoperability in primary care [100]. PCI professionals, in collaboration with experts in these domains, can help facilitate improved clinical workflows, data infrastructure, and user-friendly designs to advance comprehensive care.

PCI professionals can also augment population health management, where clinical decision support has been shown to positively impact screenings for cancer, infectious diseases, and cardiovascular risk factors [101]. Health information management systems through health information exchanges have been associated with better care outcomes [102]; data analytics in primary care are correlated with decreased emergency department visits and increased care engagement [103]. Disease registries, such as those for chronic kidney disease [104], can assist primary care teams in better managing chronic diseases at a population level. Other digital health interventions can help with preventive care, such as immunization and cancer screening, and improve clinical outcomes [87]. As mentioned earlier, the integration of social drivers of health into informatics tools and clinical workflows will also improve patient-centered care.

Coordination

The third C, coordination, refers to bringing together different parts of the health care system and serving as a bridge between primary care and specialty care. Primary care serves as a contact point to other parts of the health system, including medical specialists and social services.

Care coordination has been positively correlated with improved care measures such as diabetes, cardiovascular, and cancer screening [105]. Electronic consults (eConsults) thus far have had mixed outcomes [106] but still have the potential to assist with coordination between primary care and specialists and address access to specialty care.

Care coordination is inextricably linked with communication. Interoperability and facile interfaces for communication can improve interactions between different care team members, and when coupled with timely and convenient access to data, are powerful in advancing patient care. National learning health systems have been posited as a framework to advance interoperability and digital health innovation [107] for the public good.

Coordination includes administrative tasks around patient care such as documentation of patient encounters. Generative AI solutions, such as ambient AI [108] and medical record summarization [109], have the potential to alleviate the documentation burden in this area and lead to more concise clinician-clinician communication.

Continuity

The fourth C, continuity, has highly variable definitions, especially in the context of team-based care, but tends to refer to the patient’s ability to receive care that is centered around relationships and has a sense of longitudinality. Primary care continuity correlates with decreased patient mortality [110]. As mentioned previously, telehealth has provided new touchpoints for primary care practitioners and their patients. Patient portals [43] and patient access to notes [111] have both been shown to increase patients’ understanding of their health, which arguably in turn can be an opportunity for primary care teams to engage patients in their health over time and build trust with patients. Continuity can also be extended to transitions of care between care settings that intersect with primary care, such as inpatient hospitalization, where there is a current dearth of patient-clinician communication tools [112]—this is an area where PCI can provide new bridges for continuity.

Discussion

Primary care is the bedrock of health care and PCI in turn can vitalize this bedrock—contributing to societal health and well-being by improving existing workflows or thoughtfully integrating new technologies into care. PCI melds the learnings of primary care and informatics but is also able to add distinctive value to both fields by augmenting the core tenets of primary care with biopsychosocial-driven technologies. At a time when the global primary care workforce is facing immense challenges, PCI professionals have a key role to play in supporting their primary care colleagues, disseminating best practices learned in primary care to other informatics colleagues, and adapting appropriate tools from other branches of biomedical and health informatics into primary care. PCI is evolving as care is delivered across a greater spectrum of settings and patients are empowered with new digital health tools to engage in their health. They can benefit from new opportunities and tools for proactive preventive care rather than reactive chronic disease management. Ultimately, PCI has been an effective area within primary care and will continue to be critical in driving improved patient and clinician experiences for safe, equitable, effective, patient-centered, and team-based care.

Abbreviations AI

artificial intelligence

EHR

electronic health record

PCI

primary care informatics

SDOH

social determinants of health

JGTY is supported by the National Library of Medicine/National Institutes of Health grant (T15LM007092). Ryan Jelinek contributed to the conceptualization and writing of an earlier version of this manuscript.

JGTY and MS contributed to writing the original draft. JGTY, MS, TIL, and DP contributed to the conceptualization, writing, reviewing, and editing of the manuscript. JGTY contributed to project administration. MS contributed to supervision.

TIL is the scientific editorial director at JMIR Publications and reports consulting fees from Plushcare, Inc; however, TIL had no involvement in peer review, editorial review, or any aspects of editorial processing of this manuscript. MS reports personal fees from Clearstep Health, Carbon Health, Matter Health, and Nabla Health.

World Health Organization Primary care 2024 2024-02-25 https://www.who.int/teams/integrated-health-services/clinical-services-and-systems/primary-care Robinson SK Meisnere M Phillips RLJ McCauley L Implementing High-Quality Primary Care: Rebuilding the Foundation of Health Care 2021 Washington, DC National Academies Press 45 62 Primary care American Academy of Family Physicians 2024 2024-07-13 https://www.aafp.org/about/policies/all/primary-care.html 2022 physician specialty data report executive summary Association of American Medical Colleges 2022 2024-07-13 https://www.aamc.org/data-reports/data/2022-physician-specialty-data-report-executive-summary Brotherton SE Rockey PH Etzel SI US graduate medical education, 2004-2005: trends in primary care specialties JAMA 2005 294 9 1075 1082 10.1001/jama.294.9.1075 16145028 294/9/1075 Jeffe DB Whelan AJ Andriole DA Primary care specialty choices of United States medical graduates, 1997-2006 Acad Med 2010 85 6 947 958 10.1097/ACM.0b013e3181dbe77d 20505392 Croke K Moshabela M Kapoor NR Doubova SV Garcia-Elorrio E HaileMariam D Lewis TP Mfeka-Nkabinde GN Mohan S Mugo P Nzinga J Prabhakaran D Tadele A Wright KD Kruk ME Primary health care in practice: usual source of care and health system performance across 14 countries Lancet Glob Health 2024 12 1 e134 e144 10.1016/S2214-109X(23)00513-2 38096885 S2214-109X(23)00513-2 PMC10716626 Romaire MA Use of primary care and specialty providers: findings from the medical expenditure panel survey J Gen Intern Med 2020 35 7 2003 2009 10.1007/s11606-020-05773-7 32291713 10.1007/s11606-020-05773-7 PMC7351893 Rosano A Loha CA Falvo R van der Zee J Ricciardi W Guasticchi G de Belvis AG The relationship between avoidable hospitalization and accessibility to primary care: a systematic review Eur J Public Health 2013 23 3 356 360 10.1093/eurpub/cks053 22645236 cks053 Sabety AH Jena AB Barnett ML Changes in health care use and outcomes after turnover in primary care JAMA Intern Med 2021 181 2 186 194 10.1001/jamainternmed.2020.6288 33196767 2773066 PMC7670398 Stange KC Miller WL Etz RS The role of primary care in improving population health Milbank Q 2023 101 S1 795 840 10.1111/1468-0009.12638 37096603 PMC10126984 Martin-Misener R Valaitis R Wong ST Macdonald M Meagher-Stewart D Kaczorowski J O-Mara L Savage R Austin P A scoping literature review of collaboration between primary care and public health Prim Health Care Res Dev 2012 13 4 327 346 10.1017/S1463423611000491 22353204 S1463423611000491 Doty MM Tikkanen R Shah A Schneider EC Primary care physicians' role in coordinating medical and health-related social needs in eleven countries Health Aff (Millwood) 2020 39 1 115 123 10.1377/hlthaff.2019.01088 31821045 Little DR Zapp JA Mullins HC Zuckerman AE Teasdale S Johnson KB Moving toward a United States strategic plan in primary care informatics: a white paper of the primary care informatics working group, American Medical Informatics Association Inform Prim Care 2003 11 2 89 94 10.14236/jhi.v11i2.556 14567875 556 de Lusignan S What is primary care informatics? J Am Med Inform Assoc 2003 10 4 304 309 10.1197/jamia.M1187 12668690 M1187 PMC181979 Primary health care informatics WG International Medical Informatics Association 2024 2024-04-29 https://imia-medinfo.org/wp/primary-health-care-informatics/ Pizziferri L Kittler AF Volk LA Honour MM Gupta S Wang S Wang T Lippincott M Li Q Bates DW Primary care physician time utilization before and after implementation of an electronic health record: a time-motion study J Biomed Inform 2005 38 3 176 188 10.1016/j.jbi.2004.11.009 15896691 S1532-0464(04)00161-3 Ludwick DA Doucette J Adopting electronic medical records in primary care: lessons learned from health information systems implementation experience in seven countries Int J Med Inform 2009 78 1 22 31 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2008.06.005 18644745 S1386-5056(08)00092-0 Huang MZ Gibson CJ Terry AL Measuring electronic health record use in primary care: a scoping review Appl Clin Inform 2018 9 1 15 33 10.1055/s-0037-1615807 29320797 PMC5801885 Fontaine P Ross SE Zink T Schilling LM Systematic review of health information exchange in primary care practices J Am Board Fam Med 2010 23 5 655 670 10.3122/jabfm.2010.05.090192 20823361 23/5/655 Odendaal WA Watkins JA Leon N Goudge J Griffiths F Tomlinson M Daniels K Health workers' perceptions and experiences of using mHealth technologies to deliver primary healthcare services: a qualitative evidence synthesis Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2020 3 3 CD011942 10.1002/14651858.CD011942.pub2 32216074 PMC7098082 Liyanage H Liaw ST Jonnagaddala J Schreiber R Kuziemsky C Terry AL de Lusignan S Artificial intelligence in primary health care: perceptions, issues, and challenges Yearb Med Inform 2019 28 1 41 46 10.1055/s-0039-1677901 31022751 PMC6697547 Liaw ST Kuziemsky C Schreiber R Jonnagaddala J Liyanage H Chittalia A Bahniwal R He JW Ryan BL Lizotte DJ Kueper JK Terry AL de Lusignan S Primary care informatics response to COVID-19 pandemic: adaptation, progress, and lessons from four countries with high ICT development Yearb Med Inform 2021 30 1 44 55 10.1055/s-0041-1726489 33882603 PMC8416215 Silva CRDV Lopes RH de Goes Bay O Martiniano CS Fuentealba-Torres M Arcêncio RA Lapão LV Dias S Uchoa SADC Digital health opportunities to improve primary health care in the context of COVID-19: scoping review JMIR Hum Factors 2022 9 2 e35380 10.2196/35380 35319466 v9i2e35380 PMC9159467 Kuziemsky C Liaw ST Leston M Pearce C Jonnagaddala J de Lusignan S Towards equitable and resilient digital primary care systems: an international comparison and insight for moving forward Yearb Med Inform 2022 31 1 47 59 10.1055/s-0042-1742502 35654430 PMC9719759 Khalil-Khan A Khan MA The impact of COVID-19 on primary care: a scoping review Cureus 2023 15 1 e33241 10.7759/cureus.33241 36618499 PMC9815485 McGrail MR Wingrove PM Petterson SM Bazemore AW Mobility of US rural primary care physicians during 2000-2014 Ann Fam Med 2017 15 4 322 328 10.1370/afm.2096 28694267 15/4/322 PMC5505450 Ramesh T Yu H US pediatric primary care physician workforce in rural areas, 2010 to 2020 JAMA Netw Open 2023 6 9 e2333467 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.33467 37703020 2809296 PMC10500373 Irving G Neves AL Dambha-Miller H Oishi A Tagashira H Verho A Holden J International variations in primary care physician consultation time: a systematic review of 67 countries BMJ Open 2017 7 10 e017902 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-017902 29118053 bmjopen-2017-017902 PMC5695512 Hanson K Brikci N Erlangga D Alebachew A de Allegri M Balabanova D Blecher M Cashin C Esperato A Hipgrave D Kalisa I Kurowski C Meng Q Morgan D Mtei G Nolte E Onoka C Powell-Jackson T Roland M Sadanandan R Stenberg K Vega Morales J Wang H Wurie H The Lancet Global Health commission on financing primary health care: putting people at the centre Lancet Glob Health 2022 10 5 e715 e772 10.1016/S2214-109X(22)00005-5 35390342 S2214-109X(22)00005-5 PMC9005653 Kato D Ryu H Matsumoto T Abe K Kaneko M Ko M Irving G Ramsay R Kondo M Building primary care in Japan: literature review J Gen Fam Med 2019 20 5 170 179 10.1002/jgf2.252 31516802 JGF2252 PMC6732569 Mash R Howe A Olayemi O Makwero M Ray S Zerihun M Gyuse A Goodyear-Smith F Reflections on family medicine and primary healthcare in sub-Saharan Africa BMJ Glob Health 2018 3 Suppl 3 e000662 10.1136/bmjgh-2017-000662 29765778 bmjgh-2017-000662 PMC5950631 Gumas ED Lewis C Horstman C Gunja MZ Finger on the pulse: the state of primary care in the U.S. and nine other countries The Commonwealth Fund 2024 03 28 2024-07-06 https://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/issue-briefs/2024/mar/finger-on-pulse-primary-care-us-nine-countries Gunja MZ Gumas ED Williams RD Doty MM Shah A Fields K Stressed out and burned out: the global primary care crisis The Commonwealth Fund 2022 11 17 2024-02-25 https://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/issue-briefs/2022/nov/stressed-out-burned-out-2022-international-survey-primary-care-physicians Sinnott C Dorban-Hall B Dixon-Woods M Tackling the crisis in general practice BMJ 2023 05 02 381 966 10.1136/bmj.p966 37130600 PMC10152468 Friedberg MW van Busum K Wexler R Bowen M Schneider EC A demonstration of shared decision making in primary care highlights barriers to adoption and potential remedies Health Aff (Millwood) 2013 32 2 268 275 10.1377/hlthaff.2012.1084 23381519 32/2/268 Wildin RS Giummo CA Reiter AW Peterson TC Leonard DGB Primary care implementation of genomic population health screening using a large gene sequencing panel Front Genet 2022 13 867334 10.3389/fgene.2022.867334 35547253 867334 PMC9081681 Borle K Michaels NJ Evans DR Elliott AM Price M Austin J Advancing the quintuple aim for health care improvement through the integration of genetic counselors into primary care Am J Med 2023 136 12 1136 1138 10.1016/j.amjmed.2023.08.017 37699497 S0002-9343(23)00548-X Johnson KB Wei WQ Weeraratne D Frisse ME Misulis K Rhee K Zhao J Snowdon JL Precision medicine, AI, and the future of personalized health care Clin Transl Sci 2021 14 1 86 93 10.1111/cts.12884 32961010 PMC7877825 Tang PC Miller S Stavropoulos H Kartoun U Zambrano J Ng K Precision population analytics: population management at the point-of-care J Am Med Inform Assoc 2021 28 3 588 595 10.1093/jamia/ocaa247 33180897 5979641 PMC7936526 Canfell OJ Littlewood R Burton-Jones A Sullivan C Digital health and precision prevention: shifting from disease-centred care to consumer-centred health Aust Health Rev 2022 46 3 279 283 10.1071/AH21063 34882538 AH21063 Shaver J The state of telehealth before and after the COVID-19 pandemic Prim Care 2022 49 4 517 530 10.1016/j.pop.2022.04.002 36357058 S0095-4543(22)00023-9 PMC9035352 Carini E Villani L Pezzullo AM Gentili A Barbara A Ricciardi W Boccia S The impact of digital patient portals on health outcomes, system efficiency, and patient attitudes: updated systematic literature review J Med Internet Res 2021 23 9 e26189 10.2196/26189 34494966 v23i9e26189 PMC8459217 Moore J Dias GY How to harness the power of health data to improve patient outcomes World Economic Forum 2024 05 01 2024-07-06 https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2024/01/how-to-harness-health-data-to-improve-patient-outcomes-wef24/ Rajendran S Pan W Sabuncu MR Chen Y Zhou J Wang F Learning across diverse biomedical data modalities and cohorts: challenges and opportunities for innovation Patterns 2024 5 2 100913 10.1016/j.patter.2023.100913 38370129 S2666-3899(23)00322-7 PMC10873158 Dinov ID Volume and value of big healthcare data J Med Stat Inform 2016 4 3 10.7243/2053-7662-4-3 26998309 3 PMC4795481 Tallman EF Richardson D Rogow TM Kendrick DC Dixon BE Chapter 18—Leveraging HIE to facilitate large-scale data analytics Health Information Exchange 2023 Washington, DC Academic Press 399 421 Wagner EH Chronic disease management: what will it take to improve care for chronic illness? Eff Clin Pract 1998 1 1 2 4 10345255 Bodenheimer T Ghorob A Willard-Grace R Grumbach K The 10 building blocks of high-performing primary care Ann Fam Med 2014 12 2 166 171 10.1370/afm.1616 24615313 12/2/166 PMC3948764 Morgenstern JD Buajitti E O'Neill M Piggott T Goel V Fridman D Kornas K Rosella LC Predicting population health with machine learning: a scoping review BMJ Open 2020 10 10 e037860 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-037860 33109649 bmjopen-2020-037860 PMC7592293 Brnabic A Hess LM Systematic literature review of machine learning methods used in the analysis of real-world data for patient-provider decision making BMC Med Inform Decis Mak 2021 21 1 54 10.1186/s12911-021-01403-2 33588830 10.1186/s12911-021-01403-2 PMC7885605 Clusmann J Kolbinger FR Muti HS Carrero ZI Eckardt J Laleh NG Löffler CML Schwarzkopf S Unger M Veldhuizen GP Wagner SJ Kather JN The future landscape of large language models in medicine Commun Med 2023 3 1 141 10.1038/s43856-023-00370-1 37816837 10.1038/s43856-023-00370-1 PMC10564921 Meskó B The impact of multimodal large language models on health care's future J Med Internet Res 2023 25 e52865 10.2196/52865 37917126 v25i1e52865 PMC10654899 Clark CR Wilkins CH Rodriguez JA Preininger AM Harris J DesAutels S Karunakaram H Rhee K Bates DW Dankwa-Mullan I Health care equity in the use of advanced analytics and artificial intelligence technologies in primary care J Gen Intern Med 2021 36 10 3188 3193 10.1007/s11606-021-06846-x 34027610 10.1007/s11606-021-06846-x PMC8481410 Dankwa-Mullan I Scheufele EL Matheny ME Quintana Y Chapman WW Jackson G South BR A proposed framework on integrating health equity and racial justice into the artificial intelligence development lifecycle J Health Care Poor Underserved 2021 32 2 300 317 10.1353/hpu.2021.0065 Richardson S Lawrence K Schoenthaler AM Mann D A framework for digital health equity NPJ Digit Med 2022 5 1 119 10.1038/s41746-022-00663-0 35982146 10.1038/s41746-022-00663-0 PMC9387425 Liaw ST Liyanage H Kuziemsky C Terry AL Schreiber R Jonnagaddala J de Lusignan S Ethical use of electronic health record data and artificial intelligence: recommendations of the primary care informatics working group of the International Medical Informatics Association Yearb Med Inform 2020 29 1 51 57 10.1055/s-0040-1701980 32303098 PMC7442527 Who we are and what we do American College of Physicians 2024 2024-07-13 https://www.acponline.org/about-acp/who-we-are Daneshvar N Pandita D Erickson S Sulmasy LS DeCamp M ACP Medical Informatics Committeethe Ethics‚ ProfessionalismHuman Rights Committee Artificial intelligence in the provision of health care: an American college of physicians policy position paper Ann Intern Med 2024 177 7 964 967 10.7326/M24-0146 38830215 Levy DR Sloss EA Chartash D Corley ST Mishuris RG Rosenbloom ST Tiase VL Reflections on the documentation burden reduction AMIA plenary session through the lens of 25 × 5 Appl Clin Inform 2023 14 1 11 15 10.1055/a-1976-2052 36356593 PMC9812582 Donohue D A primary care answer to a pandemic: keeping a population of patients safe at home through chronic care management and remote patient monitoring Am J Lifestyle Med 2020 14 6 595 601 10.1177/1559827620935382 33117101 10.1177_1559827620935382 PMC7566186 Farias FACD Dagostini CM Bicca YDA Falavigna VF Falavigna A Remote patient monitoring: a systematic review Telemed e-Health 2020 26 5 576 583 10.1089/tmj.2019.0066 31314689 Shaik T Tao X Higgins N Li L Gururajan R Zhou X Acharya UR Remote patient monitoring using artificial intelligence: current state, applications, and challenges WIREs Data Min Knowl Discovery 2023 13 2 e1485 10.1002/widm.1485 Pannunzio V Ornelas HCM Gurung P van Kooten R Snelders D van Os H Wouters M Tollenaar R Atsma D Kleinsmann M Patient and staff experience of remote patient monitoring-what to measure and how: systematic review J Med Internet Res 2024 26 e48463 10.2196/48463 38648090 v26i1e48463 PMC11074906 Leung TI van Merode GG Value-based health care supported by data science Fundamentals of Clinical Data Science 2019 Cham, Switzerland Springer International Publishing 193 212 Pantell MS Adler-Milstein J Wang MD Prather AA Adler NE Gottlieb LM A call for social informatics J Am Med Inform Assoc 2020 27 11 1798 1801 10.1093/jamia/ocaa175 33202020 5907049 PMC7671633 Byhoff E Kangovi S Berkowitz SA DeCamp M Dzeng E Earnest M Gonzalez CM Hartigan S Karani R Memari M Roy B Schwartz MD Volerman A DeSalvo K A society of general internal medicine position statement on the internists' role in social determinants of health J Gen Intern Med 2020 35 9 2721 2727 10.1007/s11606-020-05934-8 32519320 10.1007/s11606-020-05934-8 PMC7459005 Capturing Social and Behavioral Domains and Measures in Electronic Health Records: Phase 2 2015 Washington DC National Academies Press Social determinants of health World Health Organization 2024 2024-07-14 https://www.who.int/health-topics/social-determinants-of-health#tab=tab_1 Andermann A CLEAR Collaboration Taking action on the social determinants of health in clinical practice: a framework for health professionals CMAJ 2016 188 17-18 E474 E483 10.1503/cmaj.160177 27503870 cmaj.160177 PMC5135524 Even D Abdalla SM Maani N Galea S News media as a commercial determinant of health Lancet Glob Health 2024 12 8 e1365 e1369 10.1016/S2214-109X(24)00191-8 38908393 S2214-109X(24)00191-8 Kickbusch I Allen L Franz C The commercial determinants of health Lancet Global Health 2016 4 12 e895 e896 10.1016/s2214-109x(16)30217-0 Montoya-Williams D Fuentes-Afflick E Political determinants of population health JAMA Netw Open 2019 2 7 e197063 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2019.7063 31322684 2738341 Shaw N McGuire S Understanding the use of geographical information systems (GIS) in health informatics research: a review J Innov Health Inform 2017 24 2 940 10.14236/jhi.v24i2.940 28749317 Chiesa V Chiarenza A Mosca D Rechel B Health records for migrants and refugees: a systematic review Health Policy 2019 123 9 888 900 10.1016/j.healthpol.2019.07.018 31439455 S0168-8510(18)30682-1 Brewer LC Fortuna KL Jones C Walker R Hayes SN Patten CA Cooper LA Back to the future: achieving health equity through health informatics and digital health JMIR Mhealth Uhealth 2020 8 1 e14512 10.2196/14512 31934874 v8i1e14512 PMC6996775 Rajamani G Espinosa PR Rosas LG Intersection of health informatics tools and community engagement in health-related research to reduce health inequities: scoping review J Particip Med 2021 13 3 e30062 10.2196/30062 34797214 v13i3e30062 PMC8663666 Wagner EH Flinter M Hsu C Cromp D Austin BT Etz R Crabtree BF Ladden MD Effective team-based primary care: observations from innovative practices BMC Fam Pract 2017 18 1 13 10.1186/s12875-017-0590-8 28148227 10.1186/s12875-017-0590-8 PMC5289007 Keleher H Parker R Abdulwadud O Francis K Systematic review of the effectiveness of primary care nursing Int J Nurs Pract 2009 15 1 16 24 10.1111/j.1440-172X.2008.01726.x 19187165 IJN1726 Reiss-Brennan B Brunisholz KD Dredge C Briot P Grazier K Wilcox A Savitz L James B Association of integrated team-based care with health care quality, utilization, and cost JAMA 2016 316 8 826 834 10.1001/jama.2016.11232 27552616 2545685 Wang P Vienneau M Vogeli C Schiavoni K Jubelt L Mendu ML Reframing value-based care management: beyond cost reduction and toward patient centeredness JAMA Health Forum 2023 4 6 e231502 10.1001/jamahealthforum.2023.1502 37327007 2806235 Liu L Chien AT Singer SJ Enabling system functionalities of primary care practices for team dynamics in transformation to team-based care: a qualitative comparative analysis (QCA) Healthcare (Basel) 2023 11 14 2018 10.3390/healthcare11142018 37510459 healthcare11142018 PMC10379116 Cliff BQ Siegel N Panzer J Deis E Patel A Edmiston C Stiehl E Effects of advanced team-based care on care processes and health measures in a federally qualified health center J Ambul Care Manage 2024 47 1 33 42 10.1097/JAC.0000000000000484 37994512 00004479-202401000-00005 Baratta LR Harford D Sinsky CA Kannampallil T Lou SS Characterizing the patterns of electronic health record-integrated secure messaging use: cross-sectional study J Med Internet Res 2023 25 e48583 10.2196/48583 37801359 v25i1e48583 PMC10589827 Kwan B Bell JF Longhurst CA Goldhaber NH Clay B Implementation of an electronic health record-integrated instant messaging system in an academic health system J Am Med Inform Assoc 2024 31 4 997 1000 10.1093/jamia/ocad253 38287641 7591540 PMC10990552 Sakumoto M Brosnan M Gutierrez J Key considerations for virtual team-based primary care Society of General Internal Medicine 2022 2024-07-07 https://www.sgim.org/article/key-considerations-for-virtual-team-based-primary-care/ Willis VC Craig KJT Jabbarpour Y Scheufele EL Arriaga YE Ajinkya M Rhee KB Bazemore A Digital health interventions to enhance prevention in primary care: scoping review JMIR Med Inform 2022 10 1 e33518 10.2196/33518 35060909 v10i1e33518 PMC8817213 Jimenez G Matchar D Koh CHG van der Kleij R Chavannes NH Car J The role of health technologies in multicomponent primary care interventions: systematic review J Med Internet Res 2021 23 1 e20195 10.2196/20195 33427676 v23i1e20195 PMC7834942 Jimenez G Matchar D Koh GCH Tyagi S van der Kleij RMJJ Chavannes NH Car J Revisiting the four core functions (4Cs) of primary care: operational definitions and complexities Prim Health Care Res Dev 2021 22 e68 10.1017/S1463423621000669 34753531 S1463423621000669 PMC8581591 Prates ML Machado JC Silva LSD Avelar PS Prates LL Mendonça ET Costa GDD Cotta RMM Performance of primary health care according to PCATool instrument: a systematic review Cien Saude Colet 2017 22 6 1881 1893 10.1590/1413-81232017226.14282016 28614508 S1413-81232017002601881 Weiner JP Bandeian S Hatef E Lans D Liu A Lemke KW In-person and telehealth ambulatory contacts and costs in a large US insured cohort before and during the COVID-19 pandemic JAMA Netw Open 2021 4 3 e212618 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.2618 33755167 2777779 PMC7988360 Thakkar J Kurup R Laba TL Santo K Thiagalingam A Rodgers A Woodward M Redfern J Chow CK Mobile telephone text messaging for medication adherence in chronic disease: a meta-analysis JAMA Intern Med 2016 176 3 340 349 10.1001/jamainternmed.2015.7667 26831740 2484905 Wei Y Zheng P Deng H Wang X Li X Fu H Design features for improving mobile health intervention user engagement: systematic review and thematic analysis J Med Internet Res 2020 22 12 e21687 10.2196/21687 33295292 v22i12e21687 PMC7758171 Broderick A Haque F Mobile health and patient engagement in the safety net: a survey of community health centers and clinics The Commonwealth Fund 2015 05 13 2024-04-25 https://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/issue-briefs/2015/may/mobile-health-and-patient-engagement-safety-net-survey-community Spiegel BM Rizzo A Persky S Liran O Wiederhold B Woods S Donovan K Sarkar K Xiang H Joo S Jotwani R Lang M Paul M Senter-Zapata M Widmeier K Zhang H What is medical extended reality? A taxonomy defining the current breadth and depth of an evolving field J Med Ext Real 2024 1 1 4 12 10.1089/jmxr.2023.0012 38505474 10.1089/jmxr.2023.0012 PMC10945763 Urlings J Sezer S Ter Laan M Bartels R Maal T Boogaarts J Henssen D The role and effectiveness of augmented reality in patient education: a systematic review of the literature Patient Educ Couns 2022 105 7 1917 1927 10.1016/j.pec.2022.03.005 35341611 S0738-3991(22)00098-2 Oniani D Sreekumar S DeAlmeida R DeAlmeida D Hui V Lee YJ Zhang Y Zhou L Wang Y Toward improving health literacy in patient education materials with neural machine translation models AMIA Jt Summits Transl Sci Proc 2023 2023 418 426 37350905 2114 PMC10283125 Zhu W Liu H Dong Q Multilingual machine translation with large language models: empirical results and analysis 2024 2024 Annual Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics June 16-21, 2024 Mexico City, Mexico 2765 2781 10.18653/v1/2024.findings-naacl.176 Melnick ER West CP Nath B Cipriano PF Peterson C Satele DV Shanafelt T Dyrbye LN The association between perceived electronic health record usability and professional burnout among US nurses J Am Med Inform Assoc 2021 28 8 1632 1641 10.1093/jamia/ocab059 33871018 6237199 PMC8324227 Everson J Hendrix N Phillips RL Adler-Milstein J Bazemore A Patel V Primary care physicians' satisfaction with interoperable health information technology JAMA Netw Open 2024 7 3 e243793 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.3793 38530309 2816741 PMC10966410 Harada T Miyagami T Kunitomo K Shimizu T Clinical decision support systems for diagnosis in primary care: a scoping review Int J Environ Res Public Health 2021 18 16 8435 10.3390/ijerph18168435 34444182 ijerph18168435 PMC8391274 Porreca D Yaraghi N The impact of population health analytics on health care quality and efficacy among CPC+ participants Milbank Memorial Fund 2022 2024-09-18 https://www.milbank.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/WNY_Report2.pdf López-Martínez F Núñez-Valdez ER García-Díaz V Bursac Z A case study for a big data and machine learning platform to improve medical decision support in population health management Algorithms 2020 13 4 102 10.3390/a13040102 Mendu ML Ahmed S Maron JK Rao SK Chaguturu SK May MF Mutter WP Burdge KA Steele DJR Mount DB Waikar SS Weilburg JB Sequist TD Development of an electronic health record-based chronic kidney disease registry to promote population health management BMC Nephrol 2019 20 1 72 10.1186/s12882-019-1260-y 30823871 10.1186/s12882-019-1260-y PMC6397481 Elliott MN Adams JL Klein DJ Haviland AM Beckett MK Hays RD Gaillot S Edwards CA Dembosky JW Schneider EC Patient-reported care coordination is associated with better performance on clinical care measures J Gen Intern Med 2021 36 12 3665 3671 10.1007/s11606-021-07122-8 34545472 10.1007/s11606-021-07122-8 PMC8642573 Vimalananda VG Orlander JD Afable MK Fincke BG Solch AK Rinne ST Kim EJ Cutrona SL Thomas DD Strymish JL Simon SR Electronic consultations (E-consults) and their outcomes: a systematic review J Am Med Inform Assoc 2020 27 3 471 479 10.1093/jamia/ocz185 31621847 5588944 PMC7647247 Sheikh A Anderson M Albala S Casadei B Franklin BD Richards M Taylor D Tibble H Mossialos E Health information technology and digital innovation for national learning health and care systems Lancet Digit Health 2021 3 6 e383 e396 10.1016/S2589-7500(21)00005-4 33967002 S2589-7500(21)00005-4 Tierney AA Gayre G Hoberman B Mattern B Ballesca M Kipnis P Liu V Lee K Ambient artificial intelligence scribes to alleviate the burden of clinical documentation NEJM Catalyst 2024 5 3 CAT.23.0404 10.1056/cat.23.0404 Bhasker S Bruce D Lamb J Stein G Tackling healthcare's biggest burdens with generative AI McKinsey & Company 2023 07 10 2024-04-25 https://www.mckinsey.com/industries/healthcare/our-insights/tackling-healthcares-biggest-burdens-with-generative-ai Baker R Freeman GK Haggerty JL Bankart MJ Nockels KH Primary medical care continuity and patient mortality: a systematic review Br J Gen Pract 2020 70 698 e600 e611 10.3399/bjgp20X712289 32784220 bjgp20X712289 PMC7425204 Walker J Leveille S Bell S Chimowitz H Dong Z Elmore JG Fernandez L Fossa A Gerard M Fitzgerald P Harcourt K Jackson S Payne TH Perez J Shucard H Stametz R DesRoches C Delbanco T OpenNotes after 7 years: patient experiences with ongoing access to their clinicians' outpatient visit notes J Med Internet Res 2019 21 5 e13876 10.2196/13876 31066717 v21i5e13876 PMC6526690 Spencer RA Punia HS A scoping review of communication tools applicable to patients and their primary care providers after discharge from hospital Patient Educ Couns 2021 104 7 1681 1703 10.1016/j.pec.2020.12.010 33446366 S0738-3991(20)30674-1