Cover image of show Value Based Care Advisory (VBCA) Podcast

Value Based Care Advisory (VBCA) Podcast

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About Value Based Care Advisory (VBCA) Podcast

The VBCA Podcast is a solution-focused platform dedicated to advancing the transformation of healthcare through value-based care (VBC) models. Our mission is to break down complex healthcare topics into accessible, actionable insights for leaders, entrepreneurs, engaged consumers, and anyone passionate about meaningful change in healthcare. By challenging the healthcare industrial complex, we provide tools, strategies, and expert perspectives that empower our listeners to navigate and accelerate the shift toward better outcomes, lower costs, and improved patient experiences. Each episode delivers thought-provoking discussions and practical advice from industry experts, spotlighting innovative approaches to healthcare reform and highlighting voices that are often overlooked in traditional dialogues. Whether you're a healthcare executive, provider, payer, policy influencer, entrepreneur, or informed patient, we aim to inspire new ideas and support you in driving transformation in the healthcare space. Powered by Carenodes.

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22 episodes

episode LEAD Model: The ACO Test Most Organizations Will Fail — Before They Apply artwork

LEAD Model: The ACO Test Most Organizations Will Fail — Before They Apply

CMS has posted the LEAD (Long-Term Enhanced ACO Design) model application materials. Preliminary scoring is due April 27, 2026. Full applications are due May 17, 2026. LEAD replaces ACO REACH in 2027 and runs as a 10-year demonstration with enhanced payments and care coordination flexibility. Most ACO applications fail before they're submitted — not because organizations are ineligible, but because they were never really built for risk. This episode breaks down the six scoring domains, in order of importance, that CMS will use to evaluate your application. WHAT WE COVER 1. Financial Risk Readiness Define your risk corridor tolerance and downside exposure thresholds before anything else. Build a three-year proforma with utilization and trend assumptions. The CFO gut check: if trend runs 2% worse than expected, do you still survive? Secure financial guarantees and a reinsurance strategy before you submit. 2. Data and Interoperability It is not enough to collect data. CMS wants to see integrated clinical, claims, and SDOH data feeds with real-time or near real-time performance tracking. Demonstrate evidence of data-driven interventions — not just reporting. The core question CMS is asking: can you act on data, or just collect it? 3. Care Model Differentiation Define your care coordination infrastructure. Are you using RNs, community health workers, behavioral health integration? Do you have programs targeting high-cost, high-need (HCHN) populations? Are you integrating non-traditional services like doula care or CHWs? Reviewers want to see biopsychosocial care — not just medical management. Medical management alone is a red flag. 4. Network and Contracting Strategy CMS wants to see documented value-based contracts downstream — not just your arrangement with CMS. Can you push risk one step further? Do you have a specialist and post-acute alignment strategy? Note: roughly 80% of costs occur in the 90 days post-hospital discharge. Weak alignment equals leakage equals missed savings equals poor financial performance. 5. Operational Execution Plan Submit named executives and clinical leadership. Define your care workflows and escalation pathways. Provide a clear go-live and scale timeline. CMS reviewers are specifically watching for the "nice idea, no operator" red flag. They want robust operators behind every submittal. 6. Equity and Access Strategy Health disparities planning is no longer a narrative — it is a scoring mechanism. Whether or not you call it equity, operationalizing access will directly impact your financial outcomes. Integration with community-based organizations signals this. If you cannot operationalize access, you cannot succeed in this program. THE BRUTAL TRUTH Most organizations won't fail LEAD because they're ineligible. They'll fail because they realize too late they were never built for risk. LEAD isn't the program — it's a mirror. Start with your assumptions, not your application.

30 Apr 2026 - 10 min
episode The Definitive Playbook for Choosing Behavioral Health Markets artwork

The Definitive Playbook for Choosing Behavioral Health Markets

Rate sheets don't tell the whole story. In this episode, Alex Yarijanian breaks down the 8-indicator playbook he uses to evaluate any tele-behavioral health market before committing capital — and names the specific states he'd enter today and why. Most operators default to the biggest states: California, Texas, Florida, New York. But population size alone is one of the weakest predictors of a winning market. The real levers live in parity law enforcement, workforce economics, MCO concentration, and infrastructure readiness. WHAT YOU'LL LEARN * Why the biggest states are rarely the best markets for tele-behavioral health * The 8 indicators that separate win-win markets from cheap-rate mirages * How to build a weighted scoring model before entering a new market * What associate-level billing eligibility does to your workforce margins * How MCO concentration affects contracting speed and rate-cut risk * Which states Alex rates as best all-around, high-risk, and growth-stage bets THE 8 MARKET INDICATORS 1. Medicaid market size: Total addressable population and realistic capture potential 2. Payment parity: State-level mental health parity laws and strength of enforcement 3. Cost of living index: The single best proxy for labor margin on clinical staff 4. Associate-level billing: Whether licensed associates can bill independently 5. HRSA HPSA demand mapping: Documented unmet need in mental health shortage areas 6. Broadband & 5G coverage: Infrastructure required for reliable telehealth delivery 7. MCO landscape: Plan count, behavioral carve-outs, any-willing-provider law exposure 8. Tax & corporate climate: State-level business environment and regulatory posture MARKET ARCHETYPES * Best all-around: Arizona, Nebraska, Delaware, Oregon * Volume, thin margins: Arkansas, North Dakota * High rate, high cost niche: Alaska * Growth stage bets: New Mexico, Montana 4 ACTION STEPS 1. Build a scroll scoring model — layer all 8 indicators into a weighted scorecard 2. Validate demand on the ground — overlay HRSA HPSA maps + FCC broadband gap data 3. Check your plan mix — count Medicaid MCOs and behavioral carve-outs 4. Run a payroll stress test — model cost of living vs. your target clinician pay band RESOURCES MENTIONED * HRSA Mental Health HPSA maps: data.hrsa.gov * FCC broadband coverage maps: broadbandmap.fcc.gov * NCSL mental health parity law tracker * Licensure compact maps: PSYPACT, ASWB Compact, Nurse Licensure Compact State Medicaid rate databases

1 Apr 2026 - 11 min
episode Medicare Negotiates Like an Owner. Commercial Doesn’t. artwork

Medicare Negotiates Like an Owner. Commercial Doesn’t.

In this episode of the VBCA Podcast, Alex Yarijanian sits down with Dr. Kumar Dharmarajan — co-founder and Chief Medical Officer of World Class Health and former Chief Scientific and Medical Officer at Clover Health — to unpack one of the most important structural differences in U.S. healthcare: incentive alignment. Why are employers often paying two to four times Medicare rates for identical procedures performed in the same hospital by the same physician? The answer isn’t clinical complexity. It’s incentive design. Dr. Kumar breaks down how Medicare Advantage plans negotiate as owners of financial risk — and why that matters. In contrast, much of the commercial self-insured market relies on administrators who negotiate without full downside exposure, creating a structural pricing gap. The conversation also explores: 1. What Medicare Advantage plans are actually looking for when contracting with digital health and AI solutions 2. Why engagement — not automation — is the real leverage point 3. The economics of supplemental benefits and underutilized Star opportunities 4. Home-based and remote care as risk containment strategies 5. The future vision of standardized specialty care marketplaces This is a structural conversation about incentives, risk ownership, and where execution truly matters in value-based care. KEY TAKEAWAYS 1. Incentive alignment drives pricing discipline. Medicare Advantage plans negotiate differently because they own the full medical loss ratio. 2. Commercial self-insured markets often lack that same alignment, contributing to higher negotiated rates. 3. AI in Medicare Advantage is less about backend efficiency and more about member activation and physician-level quality improvement. 4. Underutilized supplemental benefits represent unrealized revenue and quality movement. 5. Home-based and remote care models are fundamentally about managing high-acuity risk, not convenience. TIMESTAMPS 00:00 – Introduction 01:39 – What Medicare Advantage plans actually want from AI vendors 03:27 – Why engagement infrastructure is the real leverage point 04:28 – Virtual care, socioeconomic complexity, and risk ownership 06:18 – High-acuity members and access-driven cost escalation 07:11 – Supplemental benefits and engagement economics 08:36 – Stars, utilization, and revenue implications 09:55 – Employers paying 2–4x Medicare rates 10:27 – Why commercial pricing diverges 12:17 – Incentive structure and negotiation power 12:47 – Vision for standardized specialty care marketplaces ABOUT THE GUEST Dr. Kumar Dharmarajan is a practicing cardiologist and geriatrician and the co-founder and Chief Medical Officer of World Class Health. He previously served as Chief Scientific and Medical Officer at Clover Health and was on faculty at Yale School of Medicine, where his research helped shape national post-acute care quality measures. He has published in the New England Journal of Medicine, JAMA, and Health Affairs. Companies mentioned in this episode: 1. World Class Health 2. Clover Health

28 Feb 2026 - 13 min
episode The Rural Health Transformation Fund: What States Are Funding in 2026 artwork

The Rural Health Transformation Fund: What States Are Funding in 2026

CMS is moving tens of billions of dollars into every state to stabilize rural healthcare heading into 2026—not through across-the-board rate increases, but through targeted investments in workforce, technology, care coordination, and alternative payment models. In this episode, Alex Yarijanian breaks down what the Rural Health Transformation Program / Rural Health Fund (RHTF) actually is, what state strategies reveal about the future of rural access, and why this matters far beyond rural hospitals—impacting payer strategy, provider contracting, network adequacy, and healthcare economics. You’ll hear key highlights from state plans including California, Texas, Florida, New York, and Illinois, plus the cross-state themes showing up everywhere: hub-and-spoke models, shared services, EMS reform, telehealth hubs, and AI-driven admin reduction (including automated fax processing). WHAT YOU’LL LEARN 1. What the Rural Health Transformation Program actually is 2. Why this funding wave is different (state plans are concrete and approved) 3. What state strategies reveal about access risk + reimbursement limits 4. How payers should interpret this as a network adequacy / access signal 5. Why providers should see this as both opportunity + accountability shift STATE HIGHLIGHTS COVERED California 1. Hub-and-spoke maternal + specialty access models 2. Example of rate + infrastructure working together (Health Plan of San Mateo specialty rate increases) Texas 1. Technology as a force multiplier 2. AI-enabled specialty access, telehealth coordination, clinically integrated networks 3. Tech becomes a parallel lever to reimbursement in high-dispute markets Florida 1. Remote patient monitoring (RPM) + community paramedicine 2. Utilization management upstream in MA-heavy environments New York 1. Patient-centered medical homes + workforce pipelines 2. Care coordination over unit cost expansion in concentrated payer markets Illinois 1. Integrated primary + behavioral health infrastructure 2. EMS treat-not-transport models 3. Alternative models as a response to inflation vs lagging rates KEY CROSS-STATE THEMES 1. Hub-and-spoke models are returning at scale 2. Shared services (centralized EHR, billing, analytics) to reduce admin burden 3. AI as infrastructure (clinical decision support + operational efficiency) 4. Specific AI use cases being funded: 5. Automated fax processing 6. AI scribes 7. AI-enabled care coordination KEY TAKEAWAY Rural health stabilization strategy is not uniform across states — but the goal is consistent: protect access where reimbursement alone hasn’t been enough. Mentioned in this episode: 1. Health plan of San Mateo 2. California 3. Texas 4. Florida 5. New York 6. Illinois 7. Oklahoma 8. Washington 9. Utah 10. Vermont

31 Jan 2026 - 9 min
episode Medicare Advantage 2026: How Payers Are Choosing Partners artwork

Medicare Advantage 2026: How Payers Are Choosing Partners

While most providers are waiting on CMS, payers are already narrowing networks and rewriting delegation terms. Payers are quietly narrowing networks and rewriting delegation expectations. This playbook explains how to do business with MA business for 2026. If you’re waiting, you’re already reacting—not positioning. In this episode, Alex Yarijanian breaks down what’s actually showing up in payer conversations right now, long before final CMS rules are published. Drawing from real contracting, network, and delegation discussions, Alex explains why waiting for regulatory clarity is already costing providers and health tech companies leverage. You’ll hear how payer priorities have shifted from enrollment growth to margin durability, why network narrowing is accelerating quietly, how delegation has become a stress test, and what “value-based care” really means in Medicare Advantage today. This episode also outlines who is most at risk heading into 2026, the three types of organizations positioned to win, and what provider and health tech leaders should do in the next 90 days to stay relevant. Who should listen: Provider executives, payer leaders, value-based care operators, and health tech founders navigating Medicare Advantage.

30 Dec 2025 - 8 min
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