https://www.selleckchem.com/products/phenazine-methosulfate.html The Patient-Centered Medical Home (PCMH) has become a widely implemented model to transform the delivery of care, but little evidence exists regarding the model's impact on providers, nurses, and staff. This study examined the impact of the PCMH model on (1) provider and staff satisfaction, (2) work-life balance, (3) teamwork, (4) professional experience, (5) patient care factors, and (6) quality outcomes. The authors confidentially surveyed physicians, advanced practice providers (APPs), nurses, care managers, and office staff in 2011 prior to implementation of the PCMH model and in 2016 after implementation at 34 primary care offices providing care to 171,045 patients. A total of 349 pre-PCMH implementation surveys (84% response rate) and 549 follow-up surveys (92% response rate) were received. Implementation of the PCMH model did not result in changes in provider, nurse, and staff responses to composite measures of satisfaction (P = 0.45), work-life balance (P = 0.68), teamwork (P = 0.26), patient care (P = 0.62), or professional experience (P = 0.14). Physicians and APPs experienced a negative, but mostly nonsignificant, change in all composite measures with implementation of the PCMH model. Quality markers improved for diabetes control HbA1c less then 8 (62.6% to 67.9%; P  less then  0.001), hypertension control (60.9% to 75.0%; P  less then  0.001), breast cancer screening (53.9% to 77.4%; P  less then  0.001), and colorectal cancer screening (43.9% to 70.3%; P  less then  0.001). Across a large primary care network, implementation of the PCMH model failed to improve overall satisfaction, work-life balance, teamwork, patient care, or professional experience. The model, combined with financial incentives, did result in improvements across multiple patient quality domains.This research explores how the level of consumers' need for cognition (NFC) is associated with celebrity endorser credibility an