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Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 6/2023

28-11-2022 | Care | Original Research

The Association of Teamlets and Teams with Physician Burnout and Patient Outcomes

Authors: Lawrence P. Casalino, M.D., Ph.D., Hye-Young Jung, Ph.D., Thomas Bodenheimer, M.D., Ivan Diaz, Ph.D., Melinda A. Chen, M.D., M.S., Rachel Willard-Grace, MPH, Manyao Zhang, M.S., Phyllis Johnson, MBA, Yuting Qian, M.S., Eloise M. O’Donnell, MPH, Mark A. Unruh, Ph.D.

Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Issue 6/2023

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Abstract

Background

Primary care “teamlets” in which a staff member and physician consistently work together might provide a simple, cost-effective way to improve care, with or without insertion within a team.

Objective

To determine the prevalence and performance of teamlets and teams.

Design

Cross-sectional observational study linking survey responses to Medicare claims.

Participants

Six hundred eighty-eight general internists and family physicians.

Interventions

Based on survey responses, physicians were assigned to one of four teamlet/team categories (e.g., teamlet/no team) and, in secondary analyses, to one of eight teamlet/team categories that classified teamlets into high, medium, and low collaboration as perceived by the physician (e.g., teamlet perceived-high collaboration/no team).

Main Measures

Descriptive: percentage of physicians in teamlet/team categories. Outcome measures: physician burnout; ambulatory care sensitive emergency department and hospital admissions; Medicare spending.

Key Results

77.4% of physicians practiced in teamlets; 36.7% in teams. Of the four categories, 49.1% practiced in the teamlet/no team category; 28.3% in the teamlet/team category; 8.4% in no teamlet/team; 14.1% in no teamlet/no team. 15.7%, 47.4%, and 14.4% of physicians practiced in perceived high-, medium-, and low-collaboration teamlets. Physicians who practiced neither in a teamlet nor in a team had significantly lower rates of burnout compared to the three teamlet/team categories. There were no consistent, significant differences in outcomes or Medicare spending by teamlet/team or teamlet perceived-collaboration/team categories compared to no teamlet/no team, for Medicare beneficiaries in general or for dual-eligible beneficiaries.

Conclusions

Most general internists and family physicians practice in teamlets, and some practice in teams, but neither practicing in a teamlet, in a team, or in the two together was associated with lower physician burnout, better outcomes for patients, or lower Medicare spending. Further study is indicated to investigate whether certain types of teamlet, teams, or teamlets within teams can achieve higher performance.
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Metadata
Title
The Association of Teamlets and Teams with Physician Burnout and Patient Outcomes
Authors
Lawrence P. Casalino, M.D., Ph.D.
Hye-Young Jung, Ph.D.
Thomas Bodenheimer, M.D.
Ivan Diaz, Ph.D.
Melinda A. Chen, M.D., M.S.
Rachel Willard-Grace, MPH
Manyao Zhang, M.S.
Phyllis Johnson, MBA
Yuting Qian, M.S.
Eloise M. O’Donnell, MPH
Mark A. Unruh, Ph.D.
Publication date
28-11-2022
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Issue 6/2023
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Electronic ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-022-07894-7

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