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量子资源网鈥檚 Experts Support States in Rural Health Initiatives

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量子资源网鈥檚 Experts Support States in Rural Health Initiatives

RHTP Requirements and Opportunities: Now What?

In 2026, each state is receiving distributions from the Rural Health Transformation Program (RHTP), designed to support communities across the United States who face unique and persistent healthcare challenges. States will be using these funds,
developing comprehensive plans to enhance聽rural healthcare infrastructure, improve access, integrate care, and demonstrate measurable outcomes within tight timelines.

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has made award decisions, with states receiving notice of their allocations and feedback on their application content. States are now tasked with developing comprehensive plans to enhance rural healthcare infrastructure, improve access, integrate care, and demonstrate measurable outcomes within tight timelines. The RHTP requires:  

A strong management structure at the state level, including dashboards and oversight of programs funded through this award

Defined goals and sustainable initiatives in chronic disease management, primary care, behavioral health, maternal health, digital innovation, workforce initiatives, and other topics

Demonstrated outcomes that evidence improvements in rural access and health outcomes, as well as the care experience of rural residents

The short turnaround and wide range of components and requirements in the RHTP application process will mean there is a lot of detail left to be decided. States should be prepared to engage in a planning process that capitalizes on near-term opportunities and lays the groundwork for implementing sustainable transformation initiatives. 量子资源网 is ready to provide support with practical, field tested solutions for immediate effect and support the development of last reforms. 

量子资源网鈥檚 Rural Track Record

量子资源网 is a national leader in healthcare consulting, with a multidisciplinary team of experts experienced in policy, finance, clinical services, analytics, and community engagement. 量子资源网 has supported a diverse array of clients serving rural and frontier communities, including state and local governments, health systems, federally qualified health centers, tribal organizations, providers of every specialty, and community-based groups.

Examples of some of 量子资源网鈥檚 past work in rural health include:  

Primary Care improvement: 量子资源网 partnered with New Mexico Human Services Department to reform primary care payment models, addressing sustainability and fiscal soundness for rural providers. This work involved designing, testing, and evaluating new models, engaging stakeholders, and supporting implementation through provider training and analysis.

Tribal Behavioral Health Systems: In Montana, 量子资源网 assessed gaps and provided the state recommendations to improve behavioral health systems for tribal communities, focusing on culturally competent, integrated care models.

Strengthening the financial health of rural providers: In Colorado and Georgia, 量子资源网 supported the development of value-based payment strategies for rural providers by analyzing fiscal operations and performance and creating operational pathways to enhance sustainability and care quality.

Supporting rural residents through community interventions: 量子资源网 developed a toolkit for tackling access challenges for dually eligible individuals in rural areas, offering actionable solutions for policymakers and providers to improve care and outcomes. 

Workforce Development: 量子资源网 has led numerous initiatives to address workforce shortages in rural settings, providing solutions for recruitment, retention, and care coordination, particularly in behavioral health. As a founding member of the Workforce Solutions Partnership, we have captured near- and longer-term solutions to behavioral health workforce shortages. 

How 量子资源网 Can Assist States in Executing RHTP

量子资源网 offers a comprehensive suite of services to help states and their partners successfully implement RHTP initiatives, all under one roof. From actuarial and financial skills to clinical and operational expertise, policy, and analytics, 量子资源网 can support successful implementation of your State鈥檚 Rural Health Transformation program.

Here are some of the ways we can support your efforts:  

Program integrity and effectiveness

Design robust oversight tools to monitor state programs, ensuring transparency in funding flows, program goals, and outcomes.

Provide data-driven insights, program monitoring, and evaluation to demonstrate impact and guide continuous improvement.

Conduct financial assessments and provide recommendations to improve the solvency of rural healthcare systems.

Initiative design and implementation

Support and coach providers and health systems in operational change, clinical organization, e-health adoption, and integrated care models tailored for rural settings.

Leverage proven strategies to address workforce shortages, integrate behavioral health with primary care, and implement scalable solutions.

Design and help execute chronic disease management programs tailored to rural populations and systems.

Help implement the maternal 鈥渉ub-and-spoke鈥 model and other efforts to improve birth outcomes and access to care

Offer field-tested tools for community engagement and assessment like the HEARD Toolkit for rural residents and other resources to address disparities, improve access, and ensure the needs of vulnerable rural populations are met.

Design, test, and scale innovative models and pilots that align with state and community RHTP goals.

Sustainability

Develop and facilitate effective partnerships and information exchange among government entities, providers, payers, and community organizations to align efforts and maximize the impact of RHTP investments.

Provide a range of financial, revenue, and operational tools for states and rural providers. These tools can help make grant-funded activities sustainable, lasting change.

Conduct a range of workforce development initiatives to enhance access and optimize virtual and in-person care experiences.

A unique 量子资源网 differentiator is our team of clinicians 鈥 primary care and specialty care physicians, nurse practitioners and physician assistants, registered nurses, behavioral health providers among others 鈥 who bring years of direct care delivery experience and the ability to engage other clinicians to effect change and innovation across the delivery system. All of our clinicians have worked in rural and economically disadvantaged communities, and most have worked on rural health initiatives in Alaska, Idaho, South Dakota and other states. This team has been instrumental in developing solutions that encompass a deep understanding of the interplay between medical, behavioral health and social determinants of health as they all contribute to the individuals鈥 and communities鈥 wellbeing. Moreover, this team has helped design innovative solutions that incorporate telehealth, remote monitoring, patient apps, and other technologies that engage patients in their care, facilitate care team collaboration, and ultimately close care gaps and reduce instances of avoidable, costly care.

With extensive hands-on experience and a deep understanding of the rural health landscape, 量子资源网 is uniquely positioned to help states navigate the complexities of the RHTP, drive sustainable change, and improve health outcomes for rural communities nationwide.

Contact our experts:

Headshot of John Eller

John Eller

Regional Director

John Eller is a seasoned executive with more than 23 years of service in public administration and health and human … Read more
Headshot of Farah Hanley

Farah Hanley

Regional Director

Farah Hanley is a healthcare executive with more than 30 years of experience with state Medicaid programs, policies, and budget … Read more
Headshot of Alicia Johnson

Alicia M. Johnson

Regional Director

Alicia M. Johnson is a visionary leader with nearly three decades of experience driving transformative change in the public and … Read more
Headshot of Beth Kidder

Beth Kidder

Regional Director

Beth Kidder is a transformative and innovative health care leader with more than 20 years of experience working within the … Read more
Headshot of Andrea Maresca

Andrea Maresca

Managing Director, Strategy and Transformation

With nearly two decades of experience in healthcare, Andrea Maresca is a skilled legislative and regulatory analyst and strategy developer. … Read more
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Juan Montanez

Managing Director

Effectively applying information technology (IT) solutions and optimizing information management processes, Juan Montanez has driven operational and service delivery improvements … Read more
Headshot of Tonya Moore

Tonya Moore

Associate Principal

Tonya Moore is a lawyer and public healthcare professional with more than 28 years of government experience at the Centers … Read more
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Kathleen Nolan

Senior Advisor

Kathleen Nolan has been actively engaged in the national dialogue during one of the most transformative periods in the history … Read more
Headshot of Robin Preston

Robin A. Preston

Senior Regional Vice President

Robin Preston is dedicated to improving access to healthcare for low-income populations. She has been working in the policy and … Read more
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Lina Rashid

Principal

Lina Rashid is a nationally recognized expert in public policy, communications, and outreach, with over 15 years of federal leadership … Read more
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Jay Reiser

Vice President, Health Plan Partnerships

Jay Reiser is a healthcare executive with extensive experience driving growth and operational excellence across Medicare, Medicaid, and ACA programs. … Read more
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Matt Roan

Vice President, Client Partnerships & Business Sector Growth

Matt Roan brings a valuable perspective having worked for the past 15 years on issues impacting healthcare stakeholders in the … Read more
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Margaret Tatar

Vice President, Client Solutions

Margaret Tatar has more than 25 years of public and private sector experience in managed care program and policy development, … Read more
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Patrick Tigue

Senior Vice President, Practice Groups

Patrick Tigue is an accomplished executive with experience leading and managing critical efforts to achieve strategic health policy goals on … Read more

Medicare Advantage Ground Ambulance Cost Sharing Levels Strain Enrollees and Ground Ambulance Entities

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This white paper presents findings from 量子资源网鈥 (量子资源网) 2025 analysis of state-level variation in MA plan copayments for ground ambulance transports. We identify the range of cost sharing used by MA plans by state, the average MA plan copayment by state, and compare these average copayment levels to both national Medicare FFS cost sharing levels for ground ambulance services. The report also examines average state-level MA plan copayment levels for emergency department services.

As our analysis demonstrates, the flexibility permitted to MA plans to establish beneficiary cost sharing levels for ground ambulance services has resulted in wide variation in MA plan copayments and significantly higher cost sharing for ground ambulance services for MA beneficiaries than those enrolled in traditional Medicare. The flexibility of the MA benefit design for ground ambulance services has potentially negative consequences for the millions of MA plan enrollees and the roughly 11,000 ambulance entities which conduct these services and collect beneficiary cost sharing.

Preparing for Change: Strategies for States and Issuers Amid 2026 Marketplace Shifts

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The upcoming 2026 open enrollment period for the Affordable Care Act (ACA) marketplaces is likely to be one of the most complex since the program鈥檚 implementation. Recent federal policy changes, ongoing litigation, and uncertainty around the extension of enhanced premium tax credits (ePTCs) are converging to create significant challenges for federal and state regulators, policymakers, and issuers. Rising premiums, expiring subsidies, and shifting federal regulations also have created an environment of significant uncertainty for consumers, navigators, and brokers.

A new report, Complexity for the 2026 Marketplace Open Enrollment: Risks of Consumer Confusion & Coverage Loss, authored by 量子资源网 (量子资源网) and Wakely, an 量子资源网 Company, with support from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, explains these changes and their collective effect on costs and consumer experiences.

In this article, 量子资源网 and Wakely experts preview the options policymakers, states, regulators, issuers, consumer advocates, enrollment assisters, and other stakeholders can implement to mitigate potential confusion and coverage losses.

Federal Policy Shifts Driving Complexity

Central to the current challenges is the scheduled expiration of ePTCs at the end of 2025. Without congressional action, the 鈥渟ubsidy cliff鈥 returns, eliminating subsidies for consumers with incomes above 400 percent of the federal poverty level and reducing assistance for those living below. Early filings suggest average premium increases of 20 percent, which could be untenable for millions of families and small business owners enrolling in individual market coverage.

Additional federal changes compound the challenge:

  • The 2025 Budget Reconciliation Act (OBBBA)听removes advance premium tax credit (APTC) eligibility for certain lawfully present immigrant populations and eliminates Internal Revenue Service repayment caps on excess APTCs, including financial risk for consumers.
  • 罢丑别听聽changed eligibility and enrollment requirements. Some provisions are paused due to ongoing litigation (听补苍诲听), creating implementation uncertainty.
  • CMS updated issuer renewal and discontinuation notice聽, allowing issuers to omit premium and APTC information from their 2026 renewal notices, reducing clarity for consumers comparing plans.
  • 聽to catastrophic plan policy聽broadens eligibility but may create confusion when comparing options.

These changes are occurring alongside notable issuer exits, affecting millions of enrollees. States and issuers must be prepared to manage plan mapping and consumer transitions, potentially involving different networks and benefits.

Emergent Conditions for Open Enrollment Season

The combined impact of these changes is likely to increase marketplace call center traffic, broker and navigator assistance requests, eligibility appeals, and special enrollment activity, all of which will strain system capacity. Vulnerable populations, including those with limited English proficiency and those living in non-expansion states, face heightened risks of disenrollment. Operational strain is expected across marketplaces, issuers, and enrollment assistance networks.

Enrollment losses and affordability challenges also will be more significant in states that have not expanded Medicaid, particularly for lower income and older enrollees. The ACA Marketplaces experienced an influx of new enrollees as a result of ePTC, leading to historical enrollment growth in these states. On average, non-expansion states have seen their ACA Marketplaces grow by 152 percent from 2020 to 2024 versus 47 percent average growth in expansion states.

Regulators and issuers also must navigate the legal uncertainty surrounding the  and OBBBA provisions. With litigation ongoing, some rules may change mid-enrollment, requiring flexible implementation and communication strategies.

Strategies to Navigate the Current Complexity

To address these challenges, stakeholders can take several steps, including:

  • Clear, Consistent Messaging.聽Consumers will need clear communications advising them to review and update their plan selections. Communications should be direct, succinct, culturally appropriate, multilingual, and delivered repeatedly and through multiple channels.
  • Strengthened Noticing. It will be critical that federal, state, and issuer notifications to consumers be aligned, when possible. Notices should clearly explain premium and eligibility changes for affected populations and the actions they need to take.
  • Expanded Outreach. Enrollment assistance and direct to consumer education are critical, especially for low-income consumers, immigrants, and those previously auto enrolled. Partnerships with brokers, assisters, and community organizations will be key to reaching difficult-to-engage populations.
  • Enhanced Capacity. Investments in call center staffing, assister funding, and broker training can help address increased volume of consumer inquiries. Marketplace and issuer call centers should leverage available data to enhance their ability to serve affected consumers. States may consider adjusting compensation models to reflect the increased complexity.
  • Policy Flexibility. Federal and state marketplaces should prepare to use operational flexibility to mitigate coverage losses. If ePTCs are extended during or after open enrollment, special enrollment periods or extended deadlines may be needed. Retroactive coverage and grace period extensions could also address gaps.

Looking Ahead

The 2026 open enrollment period will test the resilience of the ACA infrastructure. For regulators, states, and issuers, the priority must be clarity, retention, and stability. Monitoring enrollment trends, premium differentials, and consumer confusion will be essential for adapting strategies and maintaining market viability.

Without coordinated communication and outreach, coverage losses and poor plan choices could undermine individual financial protection and destabilize the broader individual market. Lessons from previous enrollment periods and Medicaid鈥檚 COVID-19 public health emergency unwinding can guide efforts to keep consumers informed and enrolled.

Connect with Us

量子资源网 and Wakely experts are closely tracking federal policy activity and state actions to address these challenges. Our experts support states, managed care organizations, consumer groups, and other interest holders to achieve success in the operation of and participation in the marketplaces. Our team has broad historical knowledge of the challenges and opportunities in this market and can support every step of the planning and execution processes to optimize markets as they continue to evolve in the coming months and years. If you have questions or want to discuss the recommendations included in the report, contact聽our experts below.

Complexity for the 2026 Marketplace Open Enrollment: Risks of Consumer Confusion & Coverage Loss

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The upcoming 2026 open enrollment period for the Affordable Care Act (ACA) marketplaces is likely to be one of the most complex since the program鈥檚 implementation. Recent federal policy changes, ongoing litigation, and uncertainty around the extension of enhanced premium tax credits (ePTCs) are converging to create significant challenges for federal and state regulators, policymakers, and issuers. Rising premiums, expiring subsidies, and shifting federal regulations also have created an environment of significant uncertainty for consumers, navigators and brokers.

In this report, Complexity for the 2026 Marketplace Open Enrollment: Risks of Consumer Confusion & Coverage Loss, authored by 量子资源网 (量子资源网) and Wakely, an 量子资源网 Company, with support from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, explains these changes and their collective effect on costs and consumer experiences.

量子资源网 and Wakely experts preview the analysis and the options policymakers, states, regulators, issuers, consumer advocates, and enrollment assisters, and other stakeholders can plan for to mitigate this confusion and coverage losses.

Webinar Replay – Value Based Care Advisory Services: 量子资源网 and Wakely Put Analysis into Action

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This webinar was held on November 20, 2025.

量子资源网 and Wakely Share Expert Insights on VBC Landscape

In this webinar, experts from 量子资源网 and Wakely reviewed the nation鈥檚 progress in the movement to value-based payment models and looked ahead to its next chapter, sharing 量子资源网鈥檚 views on future expectations for CMMI鈥檚 model portfolio, how shifting market and policy dynamics may impact MA contracting, and the state of value-based enablers, health systems, other risk-bearing provider entities impacted by these forces. 量子资源网’s VBC Advisory Services team supports organizations with integrated insights across strategy, analytics, and implementation to drive measurable results in value-based care.

Learning Objectives: 

  • Review the current state of APM adoption and key trends聽
  • Explore the CMS Innovation Center’s recent activities and potential focus areas for future models聽
  • Understand policy and market headwinds facing Medicare Advantage plans with implications for VBC聽
  • Gain insights into participation trends among health systems, enablers, and states

Related Resources:

Webinar Replay – Impact Investing as Good Medicine: Prescribing Capital for Healthier Communities

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This webinar was held on November 13, 2025.

This webinar convened investment professionals from major healthcare systems alongside leaders in impact investing to explore how strategic investments in the social drivers of health affordable housing, community infrastructure, food access and security, transportation, and local community and economic development鈥攃an both improve population health and deliver financial returns to healthcare systems and payers. Healthcare leaders discussed how leveraging balance-sheet capital toward upstream solutions strengthens organizational sustainability, creates competitive differentiation in RFPs, builds community trust, and aligns with regulatory and value-based care incentives. Impact investing practitioners discussed how they identify opportunities that deliver both financial performance and measurable health outcomes, and share lessons from structuring investments that balance institutional rigor with community impact.

Learning Objectives:

  • Understand the landscape and principles of impact investing
  • Understand of business and healthcare value proposition of impact investing.
  • Identify concrete strategies for how health systems can invest

Featured Speakers:

Tyler Blickhan, CFA, CAIA, Associate Director of Investments Ascension Investment Management, LLC
Gina Kline, Founder & Managing Partner Enable Ventures
Nina Tschinkel, Director of Impact, Investor Relations & Communications Catalyst Opportunity Funds

The Future of Integrated Care Programs for Dually Eligible Individuals in Massachusetts: Key Takeaways from the Fall 2025 MAHP/量子资源网 Policy Forum

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量子资源网 (量子资源网) recently co-hosted a policy forum with the Massachusetts Association of Health Plans (MAHP), entitled Advancing Better Outcomes: How the One Care and SCO Programs Improve Health for Older Adults and People with Disabilities on Medicare and Medicaid. More than 100 key decision makers from MassHealth (Medicaid), health plans, providers, community-based organizations, and advocacy organizations attended the conference, elevating the value of the MassHealth and (SCO) programs to dually eligible individuals. The policy forum also provided an important opportunity for state legislators and their staff to learn about these complex programs.

MassHealth One Care and SCO Programs

Massachusetts鈥 One Care and the SCO programs currently serve more than individuals covered under MassHealth and Medicare, also known as dually eligible individuals. One Care is a population-specific program for dually eligible adults 21-64 years of age. SCO is a population-specific program for dually eligible older adults 65 and older, tailored to the needs of older adults. The One Care and SCO programs serve individuals with complex chronic conditions and disabilities, including mental health and substance use disorder needs, and high home-and-community-based service (HCBS) needs. The One Care and SCO programs advance independent living, recovery, and community living goals. Approximately 99 percent of One Care enrollees, and 95 percent of SCO enrollees, live in the community.

The One Care program is currently authorized as a Financial Alignment Initiative (FAI) demonstration program. The FAI demonstration ends December 31, 2025. MassHealth will continue the One Care program as a model. This transition from the FAI to a FIDE SNP model introduces changes to the program. A FIDE SNP model is a type of .

量子资源网鈥檚 Role: Bringing National and State Expertise

In addition to creating the forum in partnership with MAHP, 量子资源网 shared its national and state policy expertise and local market insights with attendees during a series of presentations. 量子资源网 outlined ways in which the One Care and SCO programs offer more value to dually eligible individuals than the state鈥檚 fee-for-service (FFS) system.

The event focused on three key topics:

  • The national landscape for Medicare-Medicaid integrated care programs.
  • The value of the One Care and SCO programs and the role that health plans play in improving outcomes for adults who are eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid (“dually eligible”), and
  • The upcoming changes to the One Care and SCO programs, as reflected in the with MassHealth.

Key Takeaways from the MAHP-量子资源网 Conference

Key Takeaway #1. Nationwide trends suggest that Medicare-Medicaid integrated care programs will face competition and financial pressures.

Forum attendees were very interested in the national trends. At the national level, D-SNPs have bipartisan support. At the same time, D-SNPs should expect competition from and innovation models developed by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (CMMI). CMMI models such as the Model and Model will compete with D-SNP models in some markets. Finally, presenters and panelists alike raised concerns about the financial risks that D-SNPs will face due to rising pharmacy costs and changes in Medicare payment methodologies.

Key Takeaway #2. The Massachusetts One Care and SCO programs provide significant value to dually eligible individuals in Massachusetts.

The One Care and SCO programs provide significant value to enrollees. As compared to FFS, Medicaid-Medicaid integrated care programs like One Care and SCO provide care coordination, a personal care plan, bundling prescriptions through a single provider, and other services.

Many forum attendees pointed out that the One Care program is one of the most advanced integrated care programs in the nation. One Care鈥檚 success is tied in part to the active and critical role that the plays in shaping program policy. For more than a decade, the One Care Implementation Council and MassHealth have worked in partnership to improve the program. As shared by the : 鈥淭he Commonwealth intends to preserve the Implementation Council鈥檚 role in the next phase of One Care, and to continue engaging the council as an essential partner in policy and program change, monitoring, and oversight.鈥

Key Takeaway #3. Over the last two decades, SCO and One Care plans have established many innovations.

The forum highlighted many innovations in these programs, from primary and to . It also provided an opportunity to talk about the important role and commitment that the plans have in emergency situations to ensure that members are safe in the face of a community crisis.

Panelists see many opportunities for plans to continue to evolve and improve outcomes and equity. For example, the One Care program has significant opportunities to address the behavioral health needs of dually eligible adults. Dually eligible adults with mental health and/or substance use disorder diagnoses are at higher risk of an emergency department visit and inpatient stay than other enrollees. Health plan per member per month (PMPM) spending on inpatient services for those with a behavioral health condition is much higher as a share of the total PMPM than other populations. The 量子资源网 data pointed to a need for further innovation in the mental health arena to advance better outcomes of quality of life and costs.

Key Takeaway #4. Conference attendees focused on the importance of addressing enrollees鈥 social determinants of health needs.

Throughout the day, the importance of community and addressing the social determinants of health (SDOH) was a common theme. Aging and disability leaders spoke about the importance of community organizations such as , , including peer support since most  One Care and SCO individuals live in the community.

Many One Care and SCO eligible individuals are often just one unmet health related social need away from the risk of hospitalization or institutionalization. Other attendees underscored the risk that enrollee living situations and recovery can become instantly unstable due to the death of an important family member. One aging leader described her role as 鈥渢riaging risk.鈥 Other leaders from the disability community urged plans to use to improve plan and provider attention to identify and address the SDOH needs.

Looking Ahead

As Massachusetts prepares for the 2026 One Care and SCO contract year, the forum underscored the progress made over the past decade and the opportunities ahead to improve care coordination, collect z codes, and invest in outcomes-driven partnerships. Massachusetts is well-positioned to continue leading the nation in designing integrated care programs that improve health and support community living for older adults and people with disabilities.

量子资源网 looks forward to supporting all organizations including state Medicaid programs and health plan and provider associations as they convene stakeholders to improve their integrated care programs. Our expertise includes program planning, strategy and implementation, technical support and evaluation, and state-specific knowledge to make projects successful. Please contact Ellen Breslin, Rob Buchanan, and Julie Faulhaber for more information on how 量子资源网 can help your organization.

Summary Facts 量子资源网 the One Care and SCO Programs
The One Care and SCO programs are population-specific programs, serving more than 125,000 individuals with MassHealth plus Medicare coverage.   MassHealth designed the One Care and SCO programs around the specific needs, preferences and goals of adults and older adults.The One Care program enrolls dually eligible adults with disabilities, ages 21-64 at the time of enrollment, covered under MassHealth Standard or CommonHealth and Medicare (Parts A and B, and eligible for Part D). Enrollees in One Care have multiple chronic conditions and disabilities including significant mental health and substance use disorder needs. The SCO program enrolls dually eligible adults ages 65 and older, covered under MassHealth Standard and Medicare (Parts A and B, and eligible for Part D). SCO enrollees have significant chronic conditions, many of which are associated with aging.
MassHealth launched the SCO program in 2004 and One Care in 2013.   The One Care program currently operates as a Financial Alignment Initiative (FAI) demonstration. The One Care and the SCO programs combine MassHealth & Medicare benefits into a single plan with one card and one care team. One Care covers medical, mental health, and prescription medications, plus support for daily tasks and independent living and recovery. Care coordinators help members stay healthy and get the services they need.
The One Care and SCO Programs Continue to Evolve. The FAI demonstration authority ends in 2025. Massachusetts will shift from the demonstration to a Fully Integrated Dual Eligible Special Needs Plan (FIDE-SNP) structure. The SCO program currently operates as a FIDE SNP model. The state reprocured the One Care and SCO plan network. The state selected five One Care plans and six SCO plans. New contracts for One Care and SCO plans start January 1, 2026.The new contracts create several changes including changes in eligibility for the program and enrollment processes, benefits, and financial payment provisions.

Rewriting the Playbook: State Budgeting in the Era of OBBBA

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As of October 22, 2025, all but two states鈥擭orth Carolina and Pennsylvania鈥攈ad enacted budgets covering fiscal year (FY) 2026, even as the federal landscape has shifted dramatically throughout the year. In particular, passage of the 2025 Budget Reconciliation Act (OBBBA) and the ongoing federal budget impasse are creating significant downstream pressures on state budgets and the programs they support.

A new report from  (量子资源网IS) examines enacted state budgets. Of the 48 enacted budgets, 16 cover the 2025鈥27 biennium, and three states鈥擪entucky, Virginia, and Wyoming鈥攁pproved budgets in 2024 for the FY 2024鈥26 biennium.

The 量子资源网IS report highlights state Medicaid funding priorities, initiatives states are pursuing to adapt to new federal Medicaid and other healthcare policy changes, and reforms to strengthen and ensure the sustainability of programs, particularly in states that expect a reduction in the federal share of their Medicaid program.

OBBBA鈥檚 Impact on State Budgets

Congress has yet to reach agreement on the federal fiscal year 2026 spending bills, and there are emerging signals of the challenges this impasse will create for states and federally funded public services. For example, this week the US Department of Agriculture鈥檚 Food and Nutrition Service notified every state that Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits will be withheld because of the funding lapse. This unprecedented situation puts immediate pressure on states and community organizations, which may need to intervene to fill gaps in essential services and benefits.

In addition to the funding impasse, OBBBA introduces major changes, particularly for the Medicaid program, including:

  • Medicaid Community Engagement/Work Requirements: All states must implement these requirements for certain Medicaid members by December 31, 2026, requiring rapid infrastructure and system changes.
  • Eligibility and Redetermination: States must conduct Medicaid eligibility redeterminations every six months for expansion populations, with new verification requirements and narrowed definitions for 鈥渜ualified鈥 immigrants. States will need to pressure test their systems for increased volume and may need additional capacity to prevent and minimize backlogs.
  • Cost Sharing: By 2028, states must apply a cost sharing requirement for Medicaid expansion adults with incomes above 100 percent of the federal poverty level, with some service exemptions. In 2026, states will need to begin efforts to ensure their systems can track this requirement.
  • Provider Taxes and Payments: Freezes on provider tax programs, phased reductions in allowable tax rates, and caps on state-directed payments will reduce flexibility and funding.

In addition, the Rural Health Transformation Program and new federal drug pricing initiatives present both opportunities, such as new funding streams, and risks, including administrative complexity and compliance expectations.

Given the scope of federal changes, states face urgent decisions. They must quickly assess and act on these opportunities, often without dedicated budget allocations.

These federal changes, combined with the budget impasse, are forcing many states to revisit approved budgets, adapt policies, and plan for new initiatives and revise programs that were already in effect鈥攐ften within short timelines and with limited resources.

State-Level Challenges and Adjustments

Notably, most states enacted their budgets before the passage of OBBBA. As a result, these budgets do not fully account for the new federal requirements, funding changes, and administrative expectations that OBBBA introduces. While many OBBBA provisions will not take effect for at least a year, states must now accelerate planning and make rapid adjustments to comply with new mandates. For example, states are expected to expediently and efficiently implement systems and policies to ensure compliance with OBBBA鈥檚 statutory requirements, particularly for the Medicaid program.

量子资源网IS has examined state budgets that will guide states through the next fiscal year, while also watching closely how they respond to new demands during the first full state legislative cycle under OBBBA.

The 量子资源网IS report describes a mix of budget conditions and actions. Many states continue to invest in ongoing healthcare priorities as well as new initiatives, including targeted rate increases for behavioral health, dental, and maternal health services. In addition, states are addressing inefficiencies in program administration broadly. In healthcare specifically, they are revisiting approaches to financing healthcare service delivery to drive more value from organizations, such as implementing alternative payment models in Medicaid programs, as well as considering tools to improve patient outcomes and consumer experiences.

States are using a variety of tools in their Medicaid budgets to manage these pressures, as well as implementing more general cost-reduction and efficiency measures, including:

  • Special Legislative Sessions.聽Some state legislatures, including Colorado鈥檚 and New Mexico鈥檚, have reconvened to address emerging gaps.
  • Hiring Freezes.聽Several states, including Alaska, Colorado, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Washington, have announced hiring freezes, which could complicate OBBBA preparation efforts.
  • Pausing or Ending Planned Programs and Benefit Coverage.聽Oregon announced that it will end its juvenile justice Medicaid reentry program to conserve funding. North Carolina will not cover new weight-loss drugs because of its budget shortfall. The 量子资源网IS report indicates that officials in other states also have signaled that they are planning for similar updates to their programs if required to address budget shortfalls.
  • Medicaid Provider Rate Updates.聽Colorado rolled back a planned Medicaid provider rate increase, while Idaho is decreasing all Medicaid provider rates by 4 percent.
  • Coalitions and Advisory Groups.聽Other states, including Rhode Island, are convening groups charged with analyzing how the federal cuts may affect their state programs and advising the legislature on feasible responses to the changed landscape.

What to Watch

Healthcare organizations are essential partners as states navigate the current federal budget uncertainty and implement OBBBA requirements. Given the challenges cited above, healthcare organizations should be prepared to collaborate and position to anticipate future needs as the exact components of the various policies are in development.

Recommendations for states and healthcare organizations include:

  • Do not delay planning.聽While federal policymakers are developing guidance and regulations, the OBBBA language provides significant information on what states need to do and initial expectations for reporting. States and their partners should be developing options and contingency plans to make expeditious decisions once details are available.
  • Monitor and anticipate state actions and develop responses that are ready to go if needed. For example, states may need to make rate reductions, limit enrollment for optional programs, and communicate with beneficiaries about new requirements. Partners should plan to adapt to these changes and assist providers and beneficiaries as needed.
  • Prepare for changes in workload.聽States will need to design, develop, implement, and report on new Medicaid eligibility and enrollment requirements. They will need a workforce that is trained and can read into the policies, systems, and related needs. States will expect their partners to collaborate on efficient approaches to meet workload demands.
  • Engage with state officials.聽States need thoughtful partners to manage and implement the forthcoming changes that will affect Medicaid partners and beneficiaries. Healthcare organizations should bring experience and data-informed ideas and input to facilitate state approaches and decision-making.

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With federal funding reductions and ongoing uncertainty at the national level, states need to pay heightened attention to the frontline of essential healthcare and human services, implementation of OBBBA, and means of addressing gaps left by federal delays. As we approach the 2026 election year鈥攚ith many governors up for reelection鈥攕tate budgets will serve as a blueprint for leadership and policy priorities in the next cycle.

量子资源网 is on the frontlines, working with states and healthcare partners to navigate these complexities. 量子资源网 has expertise, tools, and insights鈥攆rom budget contingency planning supports to analysis of public coverage program enrollment and market insights.

The full report is available to 量子资源网IS subscribers. For questions contact聽our experts below.

No Wrong Door: Aligning Hospitals and Community Care for Sustainable Health

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In this episode of Vital Viewpoints on Healthcare, Robert Ross and Warren Brodine from 量子资源网鈥檚 Delivery Systems practice explore how hospitals and community health centers can work together to strengthen access, improve health outcomes, and improve financial sustainability across the healthcare system. Drawing from decades of leadership in safety-net hospitals, FQHCs, and integrated care models, they discuss the real-world challenges of fragmented incentives, payer mix, and regulation and share bold ideas for building a truly interdependent and patient-centered delivery system.

On the Horizon: Contract Year 2027 Proposed Rule Will Provide Trump Administration First Opportunity to Reshape Medicare Advantage Program

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The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is preparing to release the proposed . Rather than incremental tweaks, this rulemaking cycle offers CMS officials the first full opportunity to advance the Trump Administration鈥檚 policy priorities. With sweeping reforms on the horizon, Medicare Advantage (MA) plans that begin aligning their operations now will be positioned to thrive in the new environment.

These reforms arrive at a pivotal juncture for MA. Enrollment, which has climbed steadily over the past decade, is projected to decline from 34.9 million in 2025 to 34 million in 2026 as financial and regulatory pressures prompt some issuers to narrow or exit select markets. Although CMS  stable average premiums and benefits next year, beneficiaries in areas with reduced competition may face fewer plan choices and marginally higher cost sharing. These market shifts are likely to influence the 2027 contract year rule.

In this article, 量子资源网, Inc. (量子资源网), Medicare experts delve into the key policy areas CMS is poised to address鈥攑rior authorization reforms, coding and risk adjustment oversight, Star Ratings realignment, and expanded program integrity efforts.

Prior Authorization and Utilization Management Reforms

CMS, across multiple administrations, has viewed prior authorization (PA) as both a cost-control lever and a potential barrier to care. In the contract year 2027 policy and technical rule, CMS officials will have their first unencumbered chance to cement electronic PA standards, enforce strict turnaround timelines, and limit plan鈥檚 use of internal coverage criteria. By mandating consistent rules across the MA landscape, CMS seeks to minimize provider frustration without sacrificing utilization management.

Risk Adjustment and Coding Oversight

MA coding practices leading to elevated MA risk scores have been the subject of bipartisan concern and heightened scrutiny as these have been found to inappropriately increase federal government payments to plans. In response, the 2027 rulemaking cycle provides an opportunity for CMS officials to develop more far-reaching reforms to the MA risk adjustment model and potentially explore more transformative models that move away from reliance on Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) data. Encounter-based risk adjustment or an 鈥渋nferred鈥 CMS-driven scoring approach could narrow payment gaps and deter upcoding.

Next Phase of Star Ratings

Star Ratings will likely see the most pronounced reset under CMS鈥檚 proposed changes. Moving away from purely process measures, CMS intends to elevate health outcomes鈥攕uch as fewer hospital admissions and improved functional status鈥攁nd sharpen its focus on 鈥渆xceptional care for all enrollees鈥 through the  (EHO4all) reward. This framework, announced under the calendar year 2026 rate notice, revised the Health Equity Index reward. In the 2027 proposed rule, CMS could call for retiring outdated measures in favor of streamlined reporting via health IT and patient-reported outcomes. CMS has also indicated it would consider other factors for this reward program.

Oversight and Program Integrity

This rulemaking cycle affords CMS officials an opportunity to expand the agency鈥檚 oversight toolkit. Advanced analytics and AI-driven audit selection will underpin fraud, waste, and abuse detection at greater scale. Potential areas of focus include enhancing efforts to promote accuracy in MA plan payments, addressing concerns with MA coding practices, and harnessing new technology to assist CMS in its oversight and auditing functions.

Charting the Path Forward

The contract year 2027 proposed rule represents the Trump administration鈥檚 first full-cycle effort to align Medicare Advantage with its priorities. By initiating PA automation, rigorous coding compliance, outcome-driven quality enhancements, and next-generation audit preparedness now, MA plans can turn regulatory challenges into competitive advantage. Stakeholders should monitor the Office of Management and Budget鈥檚 review timetable, submit focused comments during the rulemaking window, and leverage specialized modeling support to quantify impacts. The program鈥檚 future is outcome-centered and accountability-driven. Plans that embrace this vision today will lead the market tomorrow.

Preparing for the 2027 Contract Year for Medicare Part C and D

In addition to advancing the Trump Administration鈥檚 healthcare policy priorities, market shifts are likely to influence provisions included in the 2027 contract year proposed rule.

量子资源网 experts advise that issuers and other interested healthcare organizations consider the following potential proposals as well as the changes to help organizations prepare:

  • CMS might propose to tighten standards around minimum plan offerings per county, bolster network adequacy requirements, and enhance provider directory. transparency to safeguard beneficiary access as the program evolves.
  • Plans that accelerate PA digitization, embed real-time clinical decision support, and train providers on uniform criteria today will smooth their path when CMS announces the contract year 2027 final rule.
  • To stay ahead, plans should launch internal coding audits, fortify provider documentation support, and pilot encounter-level data collection now.
  • MA organizations must recalibrate quality programs toward these high-impact metrics, invest in digital platforms for real-time patient feedback, and forge care-management strategies that demonstrably lower acute events.

Connect with Us

量子资源网 is closely monitoring the federal review timetable for this proposed rule. Our Medicare experts are working with healthcare organizations to prepare to submit targeted comments during the comment window, including applying specialized modeling support to quantify impacts.

The future of MA is outcome鈥恈entered and accountability鈥恉riven; plans that embrace this vision today will lead the market tomorrow. For details about the MA and Part D regulatory and market landscapes and approaches to position your organization for success, contact our featured experts聽below.

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