Palliative care providers engaging in Accountable Care Organization (ACO) relationships have the potential to make significant strides in bridging inequitable gaps of access.
Groups of physicians, hospitals and other health care providers voluntarily join forces in ACOs, which are designed to offer high-quality, coordinated care to Medicare patients. Collaborating or contracting with ACO networks can help palliative care providers better understand and address the leading barriers among underserved populations as they move across the continuum, said Empath Health CEO Jonathan Fleece.
The ACO reimbursement landscape includes incentives and quality measures designed to improve outcomes based on population needs. Providing palliative care through ACO relationships can result in greater potential to address patients’ full scope of medical, non-medical and psychosocial needs further upstream in their illness trajectories, Fleece stated, speaking at the recent Hospice News Palliative Care Virtual Summit.