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The Future of High-Value, Patient-Centered Care

As the healthcare industry continues shifting from volume to value, the traditional fee-for-service model is being rapidly replaced or enhanced by Advanced Primary Care Models (APCMs). These models aim to improve health outcomes, enhance patient experiences, and reduce the total cost of care by supporting whole-person, proactive, and coordinated care delivery—especially for individuals with chronic or complex health needs.

APCMs are the backbone of many federal and state-led reform initiatives, including Medicare’s Primary Care First, ACO REACH, and Medicaid transformation programs. They are not just a conceptual framework—they’re operational blueprints, backed by evidence and reimbursement mechanisms, that reward providers for driving quality and efficiency.

What Is an Advanced Primary Care Model?

Advanced Primary Care Models (APCMs) refer to delivery and payment systems that enhance traditional primary care through features such as:

  • Team-based, coordinated care

  • Comprehensive chronic disease management

  • Integration of behavioral health and social services

  • Use of health IT and data analytics

  • Proactive care planning and prevention

  • Risk-stratified patient management

  • Alternative payment models (APMs) tied to outcomes, not volume

In contrast to conventional models that rely heavily on episodic visits, APCMs emphasize longitudinal relationships, population health, and outcome accountability.

Key Features of APCMs

1

Comprehensive, Person-Centered Care

Patients receive care that is coordinated across settings (e.g., hospital, home, specialist, behavioral health), with attention to both medical and non-medical needs. Care teams include physicians, nurses, care managers, social workers, and community health workers—each playing a role based on patient complexity.

2

Proactive, Data-Driven Management

Providers use data to identify rising-risk patients, close care gaps, and monitor population-level outcomes. Preventive screenings, immunizations, and social determinants of health (SDOH) assessments are embedded in workflows.

3

Payment Reform

APCMs shift away from pure fee-for-service (FFS) to blended payments, including:

  • Care management fees (per-member, per-month or PMPM)

  • Shared savings/risk arrangements

  • Performance-based incentive payments

  • Capitated or global payments for comprehensive care

This payment flexibility allows practices to invest in services traditionally non-billable under FFS—such as care coordination, behavioral health, or telehealth.

4

Health IT Integration

Robust electronic health records (EHRs), predictive analytics, and registries help manage patient panels, track outcomes, and coordinate care.

Examples of APCMs in Action

1

Primary Care First (PCF) – CMS Innovation Center

A Medicare program launched in 2021, PCF pays participating practices a PMPM fee plus flat visit fees, with additional bonuses for reducing hospitalizations and improving outcomes. Practices are encouraged to:

  • Manage high-need patients more intensively

  • Use 24/7 access and advanced care planning

  • Deliver integrated behavioral and physical health care

2

ACO REACH (Replacing Direct Contracting)

ACO REACH offers advanced risk-sharing models for providers caring for Medicare FFS beneficiaries. Primary care is central to the model, which features:

  • Upfront payments for enhanced services

  • Flexible use of funds for care innovation

Accountability for quality and equity

3

Medicaid Health Homes / PCMH Models

States like New York and Missouri use APCMs within Medicaid to coordinate care for beneficiaries with multiple chronic conditions. These models reimburse for care management, behavioral health integration, and social services navigation.

Why APCMs Matter: The Triple Aim in Practice

The goals of APCMs align with the Triple Aim—a framework developed by the Institute for Healthcare Improvement:

Lower Costs

By reducing avoidable ER visits, hospitalizations, and redundant testing, APCMs have been shown to lower total cost of care by 5–15% in mature models. Payment structures reward efficiency rather than overutilization.

Better Care

Advanced primary care reduces fragmented, reactive care by replacing it with a structured, patient-centric approach. For instance:

  • Same-day access to care teams

  • Follow-ups post-discharge

Integrated mental health and substance use treatment

Improved Patient Experience

Patients appreciate:

  • Longer visits with their providers

  • Access to care coaches and social workers

  • Improved continuity and trust

Surveys consistently show higher patient satisfaction and better self-management when primary care is team-based and well-coordinated.

Core Services in an APCM Practice

A fully functional advanced primary care model includes the following capabilities:

Purpose

  • Support for high-risk patients and chronic disease
  • Ensuring follow-up and transitions of care
  • Reducing errors post-discharge
  • Addressing mental health needs in primary care
  • Expanding access and monitoring outside the clinic
  • Goal setting and self-management education
  • Screening and resource referral

Service

  • Care Management
  • Care Coordination
  • Medication Reconciliation
  • Behavioral Health Integration
  • Telehealth & Remote Monitoring
  • Patient and Family Engagement
  • Social Determinants of Health

Challenges to APCM Adoption

While the benefits are substantial, APCMs require upfront investment and culture change. Common barriers include:

  • Technology gaps (limited EHR functionality, analytics)

  • Workforce shortages (e.g., lack of care coordinators or behavioral health staff)

  • Inconsistent payer models (some payers still rely on FFS)

  • Change management fatigue (especially for small or rural practices)

Organizations must build leadership buy-in, secure payer alignment, and invest in team training to sustain APCM efforts.

APCM and Chronic Care Management (CCM)

APCMs are naturally aligned with Chronic Care Management (CCM) services. By leveraging CPT codes like 99490, 99439, G0511, and others for managing multiple chronic conditions, practices can:

  • Receive monthly reimbursement for care coordination

  • Improve outcomes for high-risk patients

  • Meet quality metrics tied to ACOs or PCMH recognition

CCM, along with Principal Care Management (PCM) and Remote Patient Monitoring (RPM), offers practices tactical tools to operationalize APCM principles on a patient-by-patient basis.

The Business Case for APCMs

Practices that adopt APCMs benefit in several ways:

  • Financial Sustainability: Less dependence on volume; more predictable revenue

  • Staff Efficiency: Team-based care shares workload and reduces burnout

  • Better Contract Performance: Payers favor practices that can manage total cost of care

Growth Potential: Practices can scale population health infrastructure to serve more patients and join advanced payment programs

Staff Efficiency:

Team-based care shares workload and reduces burnout

Growth Potential:

Practices can scale population health infrastructure to serve more patients and join advanced payment programs

Financial Sustainability:

Less dependence on volume; more predictable revenue

Better Contract Performance:

Payers favor practices that can manage total cost of care

Looking Ahead: APCMs as the Foundation of U.S. Health Reform

As CMS aims to have all Medicare beneficiaries in a value-based arrangement by 2030, APCMs are poised to become the national standard for primary care. The emphasis on prevention, equity, and coordinated care will only grow as more states and commercial payers embrace similar models.

APCMs are not just “nice to have”—they’re becoming a requirement for competitive, compliant, and high-performing healthcare delivery.

Conclusion

Advanced Primary Care Models offer a blueprint for better care, lower costs, and more equitable outcomes. By shifting focus from reactive illness treatment to proactive wellness management, APCMs give providers the tools and structure they need to thrive in a value-based world.

Whether your organization is just starting or scaling its APCM journey, now is the time to invest in the infrastructure, partnerships, and workflows that will define the next decade of care delivery.

Chronic Care
Management Benefits
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Care Management
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Patient Care
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Remote
Patient Monitoring
Highly Qualified
Care Coordinators
What is Chronic
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Who is Eligible for Chronic
Care Management?