As Medicaid shifts toward value-based payments, it needs to transform the delivery and payment systems to reward positive outcomes, said Matt Salo, executive director of the National Association of Medicaid Directors.
As Medicaid shifts toward value-based payments, it needs to transform the delivery and payment systems to reward positive outcomes, said Matt Salo, executive director of the National Association of Medicaid Directors.
Transcript (slightly modified)
What is the biggest challenge Medicaid is facing in the move to value-based payments?
I think the biggest challenge that Medicaid faces in moving towards a value-based purchasing world is the fact that it essentially requires a fundamental reorganization and transformation of the entire business model of healthcare in this country.
The National Association of Medicaid Directors released a report about linking healthcare service delivery and reimbursement. What are the key takeaways from this report?
What we’re clearly seeing in Medicaid programs across the country—big state, small state; urban, rural; blue, red, purple—is a desire to both transform the delivery system and transform the payment models. And what we’re trying to do is essentially take an historical system that has rewarded volume of services delivered and instead try to reward for improved healthcare outcomes. And there’s a couple of different ways that we can do that.
We can either look at a kind of capitated managed care model, where we go to an insurance company and we say, "Here’s a set amount of money, for a set amount of patients, for a set amount of time. And figure out the best way that you can to innovate and to try to get these folks healthy and keep them that way."
You can also take a much more individualized approach, where some states are doing something we call bundled episodes of care, where you’re taking a much more discrete issue, say for example an appendectomy or a hip replacement surgery, and saying that for this particular condition or this particular service, there will be a set of payments.
That’s kind of 2 different ways of looking at it, but no matter what you’re doing, what you’re essentially saying is we want there to be not just the financial incentives to think about doing things very differently, but empowering people to actually bring about that change.
New Insights Into Meth-Associated PAH Care Gaps: Anjali Vaidya, MD, on Closing the Divide
June 4th 2025Research from Anjali Vaidya, MD, FACC, FASE, FACP, Temple University Hospital, reveals critical care gaps for patients with methamphetamine-associated pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), emphasizing the need for early diagnosis and integrated support.
Read More
Laundromats as a New Frontier in Community Health, Medicaid Outreach
May 29th 2025Lindsey Leininger, PhD, and Allister Chang, MPA, highlight the potential of laundromats as accessible, community-based settings to support Medicaid outreach, foster trust, and connect families with essential health and social services.
Listen
Tailored Dosing for MM Matters More Than Drug Count: Ajai Chari, MD
April 25th 2025When it comes to treating multiple myeloma (MM), Ajai Chari, MD, argued that more is not always better. More intense treatment regimens, or those with more drugs, don't necessarily guarantee better outcomes.
Read More
What's at Stake as Oral Arguments Are Presented in the Braidwood Case? Q&A With Richard Hughes IV
April 21st 2025Richard Hughes IV, JD, MPH, spoke about the upcoming oral arguments to be presented to the Supreme Court regarding the Braidwood case, which would determine how preventive services are guaranteed insurance coverage.
Read More