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The Grand Roundup: Mass General Brigham's AI PCP backlash, Hinge Health pushback on CMMI ACCESS, No Surprises Act increasing costs, US drug access & TAMs, AI market signals, and more

1 h 53 min · 18. maj 2026
episode The Grand Roundup: Mass General Brigham's AI PCP backlash, Hinge Health pushback on CMMI ACCESS, No Surprises Act increasing costs, US drug access & TAMs, AI market signals, and more cover

Beskrivelse

News & Analysis from Health Tech Nerds Mass General Brigham faced pushback from two directions in two weeks — the state flagging the MinuteClinic partnership for increasing costs, and its own primary care docs criticizing the K Health AI partnership. Kevin's take: MGB has the highest primary care rates in Massachusetts with PCPs talking about unionizing, raising the question of whether an academic medical center should be in the primary care business at all. Digital health continued pushing back on CMMI ACCESS rates, with Hinge Health CEO Daniel Perez issuing the most direct public rebuke yet. Kevin's read: CMMI set rates deliberately low to force a ground-up rebuild, publicly traded digital health companies are structurally ill-suited to participate, and the opportunity is best fit for companies building from a fundamentally different cost structure. Kevin and Martin discuss the mixed signals emerging around healthcare AI adoption: OpenEvidence showing explosive clinician usage growth while Doximity and Health Catalyst struggle through the transition, alongside OpenAI and Anthropic launching consulting arms and Hippocratic AI publicly defending its traction amid growing scrutiny. The US reimburses 88% of approved drug indications versus 30-40% in peer economies, illustrating the tradeoffs with healthcare costs in our country. Meanwhile, drug development TAMs are massive, exceeding that of even OpenAI. Kevin’s observation: we can and should be innovating here, but the healthcare cost debate must acknowledge that innovation comes with costs. Guest: Loren Adler (Brookings Institution) The No Surprises Act eliminated surprise bills, but the IDR arbitration process that replaced rate-setting has pushed prices to nearly 4x historical in-network rates — with those costs flowing to employers and eventually premiums. Loren's assessment: a benchmark price would have been cleaner, and a near-term fix is unlikely. Guest: Will Johnson (Gyde) Will, CEO of Gyde, joins to discuss Gyde’s growth via acquisitions of other MA brokerage agencies and how they integrate and support partners. He shares how they are incorporating AI, his perspective on the journey of the broker market, and the opportunity to go enrollment. Guest: Jenny Schneider (Homeward) Jenny Schneider from Homeward joins to discuss the $50B Rural Health Transformation Program and the challenges facing rural healthcare. The conversation covers the operational challenges states face in deploying funds, the $137B in projected rural cuts that exceed the investment, and why provider retention is the more pressing and underaddressed challenge. For more from Health Tech Nerds, subscribe to our weekly newsletters: https://www.healthtechnerds.com/subscribe Brought to you by: Ursa Health: Helping value-based care organizations unlock the full value of their data. Learn more at ursahealth.com   Nashville Healthcare Sessions: join HTN and 1,400 execs from across the ecosystem Sep 13-15 in Nashville. Register at nashvillehealthcaresessions.com/register/ Referenced: MGB PCP backlash: https://www.bostonglobe.com/2026/05/09/business/mass-general-brigham-primary/ ACCESS pushback: https://www.statnews.com/2026/05/14/medicare-chronic-care-pilot-access-digital-health-tech/ No Surprises Act: https://www.brookings.edu/articles/no-surprises-act-arbitration-databook/ Loren Adler, Brookings: https://www.brookings.edu/people/loren-adler/ Loren Adler on X: https://x.com/LorenAdler PhRMA report: https://cdn.aglty.io/phrma/Attachments/NewItems/PhRMA_OnePager_AccessToNewMedicinesReport_8.5x11_v3.2_Print%20(2)_20260512113247.pdf Gyde Health acquisition: https://www.gydehealth.ai/resources/gyde-acquires-we-know-medicare Gyde Health: https://www.gydehealth.ai/ Will Johnson: will@guidehealth.ai OpenEvidence adoption: https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/tech-news/openevidence-ai-doctor-medical-physician-login-app-what-npi-uptodate-rcna341064 Homeward Health: https://www.homewardhealth.com/ Jenny Schneider: jschneider@homewardhealth.com

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episode The tasks AI should take off doctors' plates — and the ones it shouldn't | Hashem Zikry (Counsel Health) cover

The tasks AI should take off doctors' plates — and the ones it shouldn't | Hashem Zikry (Counsel Health)

Hashem Zikry is a practicing emergency physician at UCLA, a researcher focused on unnecessary ED utilization, and the medical director for clinical research and policy at Counsel Health — which, this week, began integrating Oura biometric data into clinical decision-making for the first time. That combination of roles gives him an unusual perspective on the question everyone is asking: what should AI actually be allowed to do in clinical care? He also speaks about regulation — the current state-by-state landscape ranges from Utah's live AI sandbox to New York and Colorado bills that would sharply limit patient-facing AI — and Zikry argues a federal floor would accelerate innovation rather than constrain it. On the Oura partnership, he pushes back on the concern that wearables drive unnecessary utilization, contending that access to a clinician at the point of data — not just the data itself — is what changes the demand curve. Brought to you by Ursa Health: Join HTN, Atlas Oncology Partners, and Ursa Health on June 24 at 12pm ET to dive into specialty value-based care. Register to attend and receive the recording: luma.com/htn-ursa-atlas [http://luma.com/htn-ursa-atlas] Links referenced Hashem’s LA Times story: https://www.latimes.com/opinion/story/2026-04-25/ai-democratize-medicine-regulation [https://www.latimes.com/opinion/story/2026-04-25/ai-democratize-medicine-regulation] Follow Hashem on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hashem-e-z-87243529a/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/hashem-e-z-87243529a/] For more from Health Tech Nerds, subscribe to our weekly newsletters: https://www.healthtechnerds.com/subscribe

I går15 min
episode How Alignment Health gets health systems to come to them | John Kao (Alignment Health) cover

How Alignment Health gets health systems to come to them | John Kao (Alignment Health)

Thirty-five years into Medicare Advantage, John Kao sees the V28 correction as a pricing reset, not a structural rupture. Plans that invested in clinical care delivery are emerging from it better positioned than those that leaned on coding and prior auth. He expects MA to capture 65–70% of the senior market within the next decade — and argues the current administration's push on program integrity is accelerating, not threatening, that trajectory. The second half of the conversation turns to health systems. Hospitals that are over capacity are coming to Alignment Health not out of ideological alignment on value-based care, but because reducing senior admissions frees up beds for commercial patients who reimburse at higher rates. Alignment's pitch is that it can deliver on that operationally — 142 acute admissions per thousand versus original Medicare's roughly 250 — while also moving market share into the system. The business case, he argues, makes the ideological one unnecessary. Brought to you by Ursa Health: Join HTN, Atlas Oncology Partners, and Ursa Health on June 24 at 12pm ET to dive into specialty value-based care. Register to attend and receive the recording: luma.com/htn-ursa-atlas [http://luma.com/htn-ursa-atlas] Links referenced Follow John on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/johnkao1/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/johnkao1/] For more from Health Tech Nerds, subscribe to our weekly newsletters: https://www.healthtechnerds.com/subscribe

16. juni 202619 min
episode The Grand Roundup: $12B Matt Holt/Ensemble deal, Hawaii's payvider bet unravels, PwC's highest commercial trend in 18 years, Clover Stars win, clinical AI regulation, and more cover

The Grand Roundup: $12B Matt Holt/Ensemble deal, Hawaii's payvider bet unravels, PwC's highest commercial trend in 18 years, Clover Stars win, clinical AI regulation, and more

Kevin and Martin chat about Matt Holt's return with a reported $12 billion bid for Ensemble Healthcare Partners. They unpack what it means that Thoreau, Holt’s AI-forward play, is interested in a business whose CEO explicitly pitched a more human-centric approach to RCM. From there, they do a deep dive into what’s going on in Hawaii: HMSA's decade-long VBC experiment is unraveling, providers have done a complete 180 on whether they want it, and the state is now pushing a payvider merger that makes even less sense given the backdrop. Kevin traces it all back to the same payer-provider adversarial dynamic playing out across the country. Then they take a look at PwC's 2027 commercial trend report, which projects a 9% increase in medical costs, the highest in 18 years, with AI-driven billing optimization leading the charge, followed by behavioral health volume, GLP-1s, No Surprises Act fallout, and hospital services inflation. The politics aren't subtle: AI that helps providers bill more is innovation, while AI that helps payers deny more is bad. They also touch on recent stock moves for Clover and Alignment as signs that managed care is trending upward again. John Kao, chairman and CEO of Alignment Health, joins to explain why he always says not to bet against Medicare Advantage. He walks through what's made Alignment's California model work, why expanding outside the state is harder than it looks, and how health systems are increasingly coming to them — not the other way around — because keeping MA patients out of beds is good for all parties. Hashem Zikry from Counsel Health closes the show with a discussion on clinical AI regulation. He frames the current U.S. landscape as a laboratories-of-democracy experiment — Utah running a live sandbox, New York and Colorado pulling back — and argues the federal government should set a floor, not a ceiling. He also breaks down Counsel's new partnership with Oura, which this week begins integrating biometric data into clinical decision-making for the first time, and pushes back on the concern that wearables just generate more utilization. Brought to you by Ursa Health: Join HTN, Atlas Oncology Partners, and Ursa Health on June 24 at 12pm ET to dive into specialty value-based care. Register to attend and receive the recording: luma.com/htn-ursa-atlas [http://luma.com/htn-ursa-atlas] Links referenced PwC report: https://www.pwc.com/us/en/industries/health-industries/library/behind-the-numbers.html [https://www.pwc.com/us/en/industries/health-industries/library/behind-the-numbers.html] Follow John on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/johnkao1/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/johnkao1/] Hashem’s LA Times story: https://www.latimes.com/opinion/story/2026-04-25/ai-democratize-medicine-regulation [https://www.latimes.com/opinion/story/2026-04-25/ai-democratize-medicine-regulation] Follow Hashem on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hashem-e-z-87243529a/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/hashem-e-z-87243529a/] For more from Health Tech Nerds, subscribe to our weekly newsletters: https://www.healthtechnerds.com/subscribe

15. juni 20261 h 37 min
episode The billing problem is actually an affordability problem | Seth Cohen (Cedar) cover

The billing problem is actually an affordability problem | Seth Cohen (Cedar)

Seth Cohen runs Cedar, which sits inside the bill-pay workflow for health systems across the country, meaning he sees the patient collections reality that most hospitals are still processing. Most providers still sort patients into commercial, government, and self-pay, a taxonomy that made sense 15 years ago and doesn't anymore. ACA premium churn is quietly flipping commercial AR to self-pay retroactively, Medicaid redeterminations hit January 1st, and the average hospital is already collecting about 40 cents on every patient dollar owed. For a $5B system, that's $250M in net income lost annually. Seth argues that the billing problem has quietly become an affordability problem, and that the fix isn't better statements or more outreach—it's meeting people where they actually are. Brought to you by Ursa Health: Join HTN, Atlas Oncology Partners, and Ursa Health on June 24 at 12pm ET to learn what it takes to scale specialty value-based care. Register: luma.com/htn-ursa-atlas [http://luma.com/htn-ursa-atlas] Links referenced Seth’s LinkedIn post on ACA premiums: https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7453134273911455744/ [https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7453134273911455744/] How to contact Seth: seth@cedar.com [seth@cedar.com] For more from Health Tech Nerds, subscribe to our weekly newsletters: https://www.healthtechnerds.com/subscribe

10. juni 202618 min
episode Why U.S. healthcare doesn't need more money—it needs a different system | Ezekiel Emanuel cover

Why U.S. healthcare doesn't need more money—it needs a different system | Ezekiel Emanuel

Ezekiel Emanuel helped write the ACA, and now he's thinking about what comes next. To those saying America needs to spend more on healthcare, he points to countries like Germany, Switzerland, Norway—all have universal coverage, their systems provide comparable care quality to the U.S., yet they spend considerably less. The issue isn't money—it's how the system is organized. On the reform timeline, he expects policy change to happen in the 2032 election cycle, when the Medicare trust fund starts coming into view. As for AI, he believes it will be a fully integrated piece of the clinical landscape by 2030, but should be part of value-based payment, not fee-for-service. He also shares his thoughts on the longevity craze... and mentions a standing bet with Bryan Johnson. Brought to you by Ursa Health: Join HTN, Atlas Oncology Partners, and Ursa Health on June 24 at 12pm ET to learn what it takes to scale specialty value-based care. Register: luma.com/htn-ursa-atlas [http://luma.com/htn-ursa-atlas] Links referenced Zeke’s article in The Bulwark: https://www.thebulwark.com/p/democrats-must-fix-medicaid-not-just-undo-trump-bbb-damage-universal-coverage-seven-principles-reform-health-care [https://www.thebulwark.com/p/democrats-must-fix-medicaid-not-just-undo-trump-bbb-damage-universal-coverage-seven-principles-reform-health-care] For more from Health Tech Nerds, subscribe to our weekly newsletters: https://www.healthtechnerds.com/subscribe

9. juni 202626 min