Abstract
Patient-centered medical home takes years to attain. Fifteen-to-eighteen percent of US primary care practices in 2008-2017 sought or maintained patient-centered medical home recognition. We conducted interviews with a stratified-random sample of 105 of these practices to determine why patient experience surveys were chosen. Fifty-one were using a Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems survey and 53 administering another patient survey. The 3 most common reasons were (1) to compare performance against other practices, which requires systematically collected data across large numbers of practices (ie, the Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems survey), (2) participation in an external patient-centered medical home program, and (3) survey administration cost. Leaders invested in a second patient survey for quality improvement needs.