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PRIMARY CARE

TWO PHYSICIANS

JOIN PRIMARY

CARE TEAM

Bobby Khan, DO,

recently joined

Thompson

Health’s

Shortsville Family

Practice, which

is among the

Thompson-

owned primary

care locations accepting new patients.

Dr. Khan, who earned his medical

degree from the New York College of

Osteopathic Medicine in 2011, com-

pleted his residency at Nassau Univer-

sity Medical Center and most recently

worked as a family physician on Long

Island. In Shortsville, he joins Family

Nurse Practitioners Katherine Exter and

Alice DeMallie.

An open house to welcome him will

be held at the practice from 5:30 to

7 p.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 30.

Returning to

Thompson

Health’s primary

care team is

Vincent Yavorek,

MD, who has

been practicing

in Bloomfield for

many years and

was affiliated

with Thompson

up until 2006. During renovations at

his Maple Avenue location, Dr. Yavorek

will be seeing patients in offices on the

third floor of the Professional Office

Building on the main Thompson Health

campus in Canandaigua.

With the addition of Dr. Yavorek’s

practice in Bloomfield, Thompson now

has 10 primary care locations.

THOMPSON HEALTH’S

Shortsville

Family Practice is part of an initiative to

transform primary care through team-

work, care managers, and the use of

electronic clinical data to track results

and drive improvements.

As one of 65 primary care practices

to partner with the Finger Lakes Health

Systems Agency (FLHSA) in a program

funded through the agency’s $26.6 mil-

lion Centers for Medicare & Medicaid

Innovation award, Shortsville Family

Practice team members reviewed data

from their electronic medical records

(EMR) and discovered that only about

40 percent of their patients ages 50 and

older had gone for the recommended

screening for colon cancer.

So the team developed a new process.

Now, before the patient even walks in the

door, the nurse checks the EMR and flags

the file if a colonoscopy is needed. After

the doctor talks to the patient about the

S H O R T S V I L L E F AM I LY P R A C T I C E

Anewapproach

toprimary care

The teammembers at our Shortsville Family Practice are taking part in a grant-funded

program to track results and drive improvements.

importance of a colonoscopy, the care

manager addresses any barriers—such as

a lack of transportation—and the recep-

tionist schedules an appointment with

the specialist before the patient leaves

the office.

As a result, the practice’s rate for

colonoscopies has risen significantly. And

according to Director of Practice Manage-

ment Catherine Shannon, this is just one

example of the new approach to care.

The care team’s emphasis on partner-

ing with the patient is in keeping with

Patient-Centered Medical Home (PCMH)

certification from the National Committee

for Quality Assurance.

“I am very proud of our Shortsville

office,” Shannon says. “Despite undergo-

ing a great amount of change, they took

advantage of all the supports offered by

the FLHSA grant and embraced the phi-

losophies of living as a Patient-Centered

Medical Home.”

Bobby Khan, DO

Vincent

Yavorek, MD

For information about primary

care through Thompson’s practices,

visit

ThompsonHealth.com/

PrimaryCare

.

4

| FALL 2016