Risk adjustment determines how Medicare Advantage plans and value-based
care organizations are funded for the patients they serve. When a patient's
conditions are accurately documented, the plan receives appropriate payment and
directs the right resources toward that patient's care. When documentation
falls short, care planning follows. Prospective risk adjustment
fixes this by identifying patient health complexity before the next care period
begins, not after problems surface. With CMS-HCC V28 fully in effect for 2026,
what gets documented today directly shapes how patients are managed tomorrow.
Why Timing Changes Everything
Healthcare risk adjustment runs in two
modes: prospective and concurrent. The difference is when patient data is used.
A concurrent model uses current-year diagnosis data to calculate that
same year's costs, leaving little room for early intervention. A prospective
model uses prior-year data to anticipate patient needs before a new care period
begins. CMS uses the prospective model for Medicare Advantage and most ACO
arrangements.
Diagnoses documented during 2025 encounters determine how patients are
resourced in 2026. That timing creates a clinical opportunity. Providers who
know which conditions are on record and which are missing can identify patients
who need active management before problems escalate, not after.
Risk Scores and What They Mean for Patients
CMS calculates risk adjustment scores through the Hierarchical
Condition Categories model, or CMS-HCC. Diagnosis codes map to HCC categories,
each carrying a relative cost weight. Age, sex, and disability status are
factored in alongside diagnoses to produce a Risk Adjustment Factor score.
A patient with average health complexity scores 1.0. Those with multiple
chronic conditions can reach 2.5 to 4.0. That score determines how much funding
flows toward managing that patient's care.
When conditions go undocumented, the RAF score drops. So does the
funding allocated for care coordination, chronic disease management, and
preventive services. Accurate documentation is not just a billing function. It
is what ensures patients receive care proportionate to their actual needs.
What Prospective Coding Does at the Care Level
When chronic conditions and documentation gaps are identified before the
next care period opens, providers can act on them rather than react to them
later. A patient with incomplete diabetes and chronic kidney disease
documentation gets flagged for a targeted follow-up. An annual wellness gap
gets closed during the encounter rather than discovered in a year-end chart
review.
This shifts documentation from back-end correction to front-end clinical
engagement. What that means in practice:
- High-risk patients are
identified earlier in the care cycle
- Active chronic conditions are more completely
captured at the point of care
- Care coordination improves when the full
condition picture is on record
- Patients with complex needs are less likely to
be under-resourced due to documentation gaps
Documentation Specificity Under V28
For 2026, risk scores are calculated entirely under CMS-HCC V28,
completing a three-year phase-in. V28 requires greater documentation
specificity than its predecessor. A note reading "diabetes" without
specifying type and complication does not map to the same HCC as "Type 2
diabetes mellitus with diabetic chronic kidney disease."
That gap in documentation reflects a gap in how the system understands
and funds that patient's care. Conditions that are actively managed but vaguely
documented may not register under V28 at all, which means the patients carrying
those conditions receive less targeted support going into the next performance
year.
Conclusion
Prospective risk adjustment supports better patient care because it
moves identification and documentation upstream. When conditions are on record
before the care period begins, providers plan with a complete clinical picture
rather than filling gaps mid-year. Organizations that maintain accurate,
continuous healthcare risk adjustment workflows are better positioned to serve
complex patients and fund that care appropriately.
Persivia's digital healthcare platforms support organizations in managing risk adjustment workflows, identifying HCC coding gaps, and maintaining population health visibility throughout the year. For Medicare Advantage plans and ACOs where documentation directly shapes patient outcomes, that kind of structured risk adjustment solution keeps care planning and financial performance aligned.




