ACOs are under more pressure than ever. With CMS pushing organizations
toward two-sided risk faster than most are ready for, and quality reporting
requirements getting tighter every cycle, the Care
Management Software an ACO runs on is not a background decision
anymore. It directly affects shared savings performance, quality scores, and
whether care teams can keep up with a growing attributed population. Here is
what the software actually needs to do in 2026 to be worth the investment.
What ACOs Actually Need from Care Management
Software
ACO care teams handle a lot at once: finding patients who need
attention, following up on gaps, keeping providers in the loop, managing care
transitions, and reporting on quality measures, often across multiple
contracts. Most are doing this across several tools that were never meant to
work together, which means a lot of time goes into coordination that the Care
Management Software should be handling. Good software does not just
organize the work. It moves it forward without someone manually pushing every
step.
The Capabilities That Matter in 2026
Risk Stratification That Runs Continuously
A patient can be discharged, readmitted, and back home before a monthly
report even runs. Risk scores need to stay current, updating as new labs,
claims, and EHR entries come in, so care managers are working from today's
picture, not last month's.
Static lists go stale. Real-time stratification is what keeps high-risk
patients from falling through the cracks.
Multi-Payer Contract Management in One View
Running MSSP and ACO REACH at the same time, alongside a Medicare
Advantage or commercial agreement, means tracking different measures and
deadlines for each one. When those live in separate tools, something always
gets missed. One view covering all active contracts keeps the whole team on the
same page without anyone manually bridging the gaps.
Care Gap Tracking and Closure
Finding a gap means nothing if it never reaches the right person. It
needs to land in the care manager's existing workflow, not in a separate system
they have to remember to check. There also needs to be a clear record of
whether it was actually closed, because at year's end, open gaps show up as
missed HEDIS measures.
Point-of-Care Alerts and Provider Engagement
The provider sitting with a patient is often the best person to close a
care gap on the spot. If the Care Management Platform only sends
information to the back-office team, that moment is gone. Alerts that show up
during the visit, flagging overdue screenings or missing documentation, get
acted on far more often than ones that arrive in a report later.
Care Transitions and Post-Discharge Monitoring
Most readmissions come down to a gap in follow-up. The patient leaves,
everyone assumes the next person is handling it, and nothing happens until the
patient is back in the ED. Post-discharge outreach needs to go out
automatically, with tasks assigned and the patient tracked until the transition
is properly closed. Care Management for ACOs needs that structure built in, not
assembled manually each time someone is discharged.
Quality Reporting Built Into the Workflow
HEDIS measures, HCC coding, eCQM submissions: these should come out of
the care work already being done, not require a separate project at the end of
each quarter. When reporting means a manual pull, it is always incomplete and
always late. The Care Management Platform needs to generate that reporting from
the same data that care teams are already working with every day.
Implementation Speed Is Part of the Decision Too
An ACO signing a new contract in January cannot wait until fall to have
its platform running. How fast a team can get up and going matters as much as
the feature list.
PMC ACO went from contract signing to live in under 30 days, with custom
forms and workflows set up in about a week and care managers trained in a
single day. That kind of timeline
is what organizations working under real contract pressure need.
What the Strongest Platforms Have in Common
The ACOs hitting their benchmarks right now are not running the most
tools. They picked one platform that covers the full picture and got their
teams working from the same system. A few things show up consistently in the
ones that hold up:
- Risk stratification
that updates without anyone running a manual process
- Care gaps that surface inside daily workflows,
not in a separate system
- Post-discharge monitoring that runs
automatically, not by memory
- Multi-contract visibility in one place
- Quality reporting that builds from existing
clinical activity
Final Call
Persivia's CareSpace® covers all of it. Clinical and claims data connected into one record, risk stratification that stays current, care gaps surfaced at the point of care, multiple contracts tracked in one place, and quality reporting that does not require a manual process at quarter-end. For ACOs in MSSP, ACO REACH, or any other value-based program working to hit benchmarks without adding to their team's load, see what this platform does.




