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 At a time when a shortage of primary  care providers is threatening the accessibility and quality of care in the  country, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) is teaming with the Group  Health Research Institute on a new national program designed to identify  creative practices that make primary care more efficient and effective. The  Primary Care Team: Learning from Effective Ambulatory Practices (the LEAP  Project) will identify primary care practices that use health professionals  and other staff in ways that maximize access to their services, so these  workforce models can be replicated and adopted more widely. 
With millions more Americans poised  to enter the health system as the Affordable Care Act is implemented, the new  program will identify changes in policy, workforce, culture, education and  training related to primary care that can improve the way practices function.  Its goal is to identify and then study up to 30 high-functioning primary care  practices to learn about innovative staffing arrangements that maximize the  contributions of health professionals and other staff. 
Ed Wagner, MD, MPH, and Margaret Flinter,  PhD, APRN, are co-directors of The Primary Care Team, and the MacColl  Center for Health Care Innovation at Group Health Research Institute in Seattle  will serve as its national program office. Wagner is director of the MacColl  Center and Flinter, a family nurse practitioner by clinical background, is  senior vice president and clinical director of the Community Health Center,  Inc., a statewide Federally Qualified Health Center in Connecticut and director  of its Weitzman Center for Innovation. She is an alumna of the RWJF  Executive Nurse Fellows program. 
“The Foundation’s mission is to  improve health and health care, and we cannot succeed unless we address the  shortage of primary care services,” said John Lumpkin, MD, MPH, RWJF senior  vice president and director of the Health Care Group. “The nation will not be  able to train new primary care providers quickly enough to meet the need, so  part of the solution must be to use the workforce we have more effectively.  This new program will identify ways to do that.” 
“Improving the quality of primary  care is a key objective of health care reform. Central to the improvement of  primary care is the development of effective primary care teams,” Wagner said.  "We are delighted that this project will allow us to study some of the  nation’s finest primary care practices and spread their staffing innovations to  others.” 
“This project is particularly  important because it recognizes that there is tremendous diversity in primary  care settings across the country,” Flinter said, “from small private practices,  to large health systems, to community health centers. We need all of these  practices to perform at the highest level.” 
A National Advisory Committee,  chaired by Thomas S. Bodenheimer, MD, MPH, adjunct professor at the University  of California, San Francisco, School of Medicine, will develop and apply the  criteria for selecting the exemplary primary care practices, which will  represent a variety of settings, practice configurations and locations. A  research team will conduct site visits and then the sites will join together in  a learning community to share best practices and to help distill their  innovations into a toolkit that can be used by others. 
In recent years, many primary care  sites have described creative workforce models, but there is little information  available about how their workforce changes have affected access, quality,  value, and patient or provider experience. Thus, many of the new workforce  models have not been widely adopted. The Primary Care Team: Learning from  Effective Ambulatory Practices is designed to identify those that improve  patient and practice outcomes, and share information so they can be replicated. 
Initial RWJF funding will support The  Primary Care Team through June 2014. 
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