Medical directors in ACOs carry both clinical and financial responsibility. Quality scores, shared savings targets, care gap rates, total cost of care: all of it runs through leadership decisions. The ACOs consistently hitting their benchmarks are not working harder than the ones that are not. They have clearer ACO success strategies and the operational structure to follow through on them. Here are seven that show up repeatedly in high-performing organizations.
1. Know Your Population Before the Year Begins
Before the performance year starts, the care team needs a clear view of
which patients need the most attention, which conditions are unmanaged, and
where care gaps already exist. That picture has to be current. Patient data
changes constantly, and a risk assessment from three months ago may not reflect
where a patient stands today.
2. Build Structure Around Post-Discharge Follow-Up
Readmissions are largely a coordination problem, not a clinical one.
What happens between discharge and the first follow-up visit determines whether
a patient stabilizes or returns. A follow-up plan, medication review, and
monitoring schedule need to be confirmed before the patient leaves, not
scheduled later when someone has time.
When post-discharge steps depend on someone remembering to initiate
them, patients slip through. A reliable process moves on its own once discharge
happens.
3. Close Care Gaps During the Year
Care gaps need to reach the right person while there is still time to
act on them. A gap flagged in a report that nobody checks weekly is not a
functioning alert system. Prompts during provider visits and timely patient
outreach are what actually move gap closure rates.
An ACO that starts addressing gaps in the final quarter of the year has
very little room to recover lost ground on quality measures.
4. Eliminate Redundant Services
When providers lack access to a complete patient record, they order
tests and procedures that have already been done elsewhere. The patient gets
billed twice, and the ACO absorbs the cost at reconciliation. Giving every
provider a shared view of what has already happened is the most direct way to
reduce this.
5. Monitor Network Utilization
Care delivered outside the ACO network often goes untracked until
reconciliation. By that point, there is no opportunity to coordinate or prevent
follow-on costs. Keeping visibility into where attributed patients receive care
throughout the year is part of managing the total cost of care.
6. Align Provider Incentives With Contract Goals
Providers operating under fee-for-service logic will continue to
prioritize volume unless their compensation reflects something different. Tying
performance metrics to pay is what shifts daily clinical behavior toward the
outcomes a value-based contract requires.
7. Track Quality Measures Throughout the Year
Quality performance reviewed only at year's end leaves no room to
respond. Tracking measures throughout the year means a team can address a gap
falling short in June rather than finding out in December when nothing can be
done. HEDIS, STAR ratings, and HCC coding accuracy all need to be visible while
there is still time to act.
Conclusion
These ACO success strategies require more than good intentions. They
require a system where the right information gets to the right person while
action is still possible. Clinical staff and leadership can only act on what
they can see, and they can only act in time if the process does not depend on
manual steps to move forward.
Persivia's CareSpace® supports each of these strategies inside one connected platform, covering risk stratification, post-discharge monitoring, care gap management, quality tracking, and network utilization reporting for ACOs running MSSP, ACO REACH, and other value-based programs. See how CareSpace® supports ACO performance.
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