Medicare Health Risk Assessment 2025: Everything You Need to Know

Story by Connor Danielowski / September 2, 2025

Health Risk Assessments (HRAs) play a pivotal role in the Medicare landscape, serving as foundational elements of preventive care, care planning, and risk adjustment. As we move deeper into 2025, HRAs remain central, but the dynamics around them are shifting. Here’s a comprehensive, state-of-the-art update on what practitioners, care organizations, and Medicare Advantage plans need to understand.

1. Medicare Basics: The Annual Wellness Visit & HRA Standards

Under Original Medicare, HRAs are embedded in the Annual Wellness Visit (AWV). During this visit, patients complete a standardized questionnaire covering demographics, self-assessed health status, psychosocial and behavioral risks, and more (Medicare AWV overview).

Medicare Advantage plans also utilize HRAs as required components, conducting initial HRAs soon after enrollment and repeating them annually to guide personalized prevention plans and care coordination.

CMS 2025 Final Rule and HRA Incentive Shifts

2. What Has Changed in 2025? Breaking Through the Surface

a) CMS’s 2025 Final Rule and HRA Incentive Shifts

New policy guidance under the 2025 CMS Final Rule removed incentives tied to HRAs for brokers and agents. This change discourages reliance on third-party influencers to drive HRA completion and instead favors digital and member-centric engagement approaches. The shift comes as CMS also ramps up attention on risk model fidelity, trimming hierarchical condition category payments by 2.45%. This impacts risk adjustment globally (2025 CMS Final Rule overview).

b) Focus on Health Equity and Supplemental Benefit Outreach

CMS’s 2025 rule further emphasizes health equity, requiring plans to conduct personalized mid-year outreach to inform beneficiaries about unused supplemental benefits. This presents an opportunity to couple HRA efforts with targeted equity-led outreach for increased relevance and effectiveness.

3. Risk Adjustment and the “$7.5 Billion Concern”

One glaring trend: diagnoses coded solely based on HRAs and not corroborated through provider visits or medical records are responsible for an estimated $7.5 billion in risk-adjusted payments in 2023 for Medicare Advantage plans. Much of this stems from in-home HRAs or HRA-linked chart reviews conducted by plans or vendors, bypassing primary care involvement.

This raises two concerns:

  • Potential inaccuracy of the HRA-derived diagnoses
  • Lack of follow-up care, indicating care gaps despite coding-based revenue gains

To strengthen integrity, experts (including the HHS Office of Inspector General) recommend CMS impose stricter audit and validation requirements for HRA-based diagnoses (OIG concerns over MA HRA misuse).

4. Member Experience and Engagement: Completing HRAs Gets Smarter

Now more than ever, completing HRAs is less about compliance than meaningful engagement. Insurers increasingly deploy incentives ranging from gift cards to retailer points for completion. In 2023, 62% of Medicare Advantage enrollees were in plans offering rewards of $10–$100 for HRA completion, with major insurers like Centene, CVS, and UnitedHealthcare reaching participation rates near 98–99% (KFF analysis of HRA incentives).

Beyond incentives, digital engagement tools such as AI chatbots, mobile forms, and adaptive routing improve completion while reducing clinician burden (HRA member engagement tech).

5. Emerging Best Practices: Integrating HRAs into Care Strategy

Here are forward-thinking strategies that go beyond the status quo:

  • Hybrid Completion Models: Combine telephonic, digital, and in-person HRA options tailored to patient preference and digital access.
  • Follow-up Protocols for HRA Findings: Ensure every risk indicator flagged via HRA triggers appropriate care coordination, triage, or referrals.
  • Equity-Centered HRA Design: Customize HRA content and outreach considering language, health literacy, and social determinants.
  • Audit and Feedback Mechanisms: Plan-level audits for HRA-derived diagnoses help validate coding and ensure downstream care delivery.
  • Embedding HRAs in Ongoing Chronic Care: Link HRAs to chronic care programs like CCM, RPM, or behavioral health to maintain continuity and proactive care.

These innovations represent data-driven opportunities to elevate HRAs from perfunctory documentation to dynamic tools for targeted, patient-centered care.

6. Internal Support via Chronic Care Staffing (CCS)

Chronic Care Staffing is uniquely positioned to help health systems operationalize HRAs through these services:

  • Chronic Care Management
  • Remote Patient Monitoring
  • Behavioral Health Integration

Leveraging experience across preventive care workflows, CCS can support HRA implementation in ways that improve care coordination and protect compliance integrity.

CCS can support HRA implementation in ways that improve care coordination and protect compliance integrity

7. Summary: HRA in 2025, Evolving but Essential

  • Medicare AWVs continue to require HRAs as core components.
  • CMS is tightening incentive-based HRA completion while spotlighting health equity and outreach.
  • Risk adjustment misuse via unsupported HRA diagnoses poses financial and ethical risks.
  • Consumer-centric, audit-ready, and equity-oriented HRA strategies are emerging as industry best practices.
  • Integrating HRA workflows with chronic care operations (through teams like CCS) closes the loop between assessment and action.
Chronic Care Staffing 10 Year Anniversary

About the Author

Connor Danielowski

Chief Operating Officer, Chronic Care Staffing

Connor Danielowski is the Chief Operating Officer at Chronic Care Staffing, where he leads operations, strategy, and growth initiatives focused on delivering high-impact virtual care solutions. He brings a unique blend of clinical service knowledge and financial expertise to help healthcare organizations implement and scale Chronic Care Management (CCM), Remote Patient Monitoring (RPM), and other virtual care management services.

Connor began his career in investment banking and private equity, where he focused on investing in healthcare businesses and working closely with management teams to drive revenue growth and profitability. This experience shaped his hands-on, results-oriented approach to healthcare operations today.

He holds a degree in Accounting from Washington & Lee University and brings both analytical rigor and a patient-first mindset to his role. In addition to his work at Chronic Care Staffing, Connor serves on the development board for the MUSC College of Nursing. He lives in Charleston, SC, with his wife and son.


 
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