Historically, payers have focused on financial risk while providers have dedicated themselves to improving patient health at the encounter level. Both have stayed in their respective silos with little incentive (or the technological ability) to coordinate efforts. However, the dynamic between payers and providers is changing, with recent legislation and the COVID-19 pandemic accelerating that change even further. As a result, health plans have a prime opportunity to adopt technologies that will bridge the gap and emerge as industry innovators.
Historically, payers have focused on financial risk while providers have dedicated themselves to improving patient health at the encounter level. Both have stayed in their respective silos with little incentive (or the technological ability) to coordinate efforts. However, the dynamic between payers and providers is changing, with recent legislation and the COVID-19 pandemic accelerating that change even further. As a result, health plans have a prime opportunity to adopt technologies that will bridge the gap and emerge as industry innovators.
Read this Whitepaper to learn about: :
Payer-provider collaboration hasn’t been successful in the past
Value-based contracting is hard to achieve
Existing technologies haven’t worked to bridge the payer-provider data gap
The time to use disruption to accelerate digital transformation is now
Historically, payers have focused on financial risk while providers have dedicated themselves to improving patient health at the encounter level. Both have stayed in their respective silos with little incentive (or the technological ability) to coordinate efforts. However, the dynamic between payers and providers is changing, with recent legislation and the COVID-19 pandemic accelerating that change even further. As a result, health plans have a prime opportunity to adopt technologies that will bridge the gap and emerge as industry innovators.
Historically, payers have focused on financial risk while providers have dedicated themselves to improving patient health at the encounter level. Both have stayed in their respective silos with little incentive (or the technological ability) to coordinate efforts. However, the dynamic between payers and providers is changing, with recent legislation and the COVID-19 pandemic accelerating that change even further. As a result, health plans have a prime opportunity to adopt technologies that will bridge the gap and emerge as industry innovators.
Read this Whitepaper to learn about: :
Payer-provider collaboration hasn’t been successful in the past
Value-based contracting is hard to achieve
Existing technologies haven’t worked to bridge the payer-provider data gap
The time to use disruption to accelerate digital transformation is now
Historically, payers have focused on financial risk while providers have dedicated themselves to improving patient health at the encounter level. Both have stayed in their respective silos with little incentive (or the technological ability) to coordinate efforts. However, the dynamic between payers and providers is changing, with recent legislation and the COVID-19 pandemic accelerating that change even further. As a result, health plans have a prime opportunity to adopt technologies that will bridge the gap and emerge as industry innovators.
Historically, payers have focused on financial risk while providers have dedicated themselves to improving patient health at the encounter level. Both have stayed in their respective silos with little incentive (or the technological ability) to coordinate efforts. However, the dynamic between payers and providers is changing, with recent legislation and the COVID-19 pandemic accelerating that change even further. As a result, health plans have a prime opportunity to adopt technologies that will bridge the gap and emerge as industry innovators.
Read this Whitepaper to learn about: :
Payer-provider collaboration hasn’t been successful in the past
Value-based contracting is hard to achieve
Existing technologies haven’t worked to bridge the payer-provider data gap
The time to use disruption to accelerate digital transformation is now