The Execution Gap

Season 1 Ep7: ECDS Was Supposed to Solve the Data Quality Problem. It Didn't. It Moved It.

18 min · 28 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Season 1 Ep7: ECDS Was Supposed to Solve the Data Quality Problem. It Didn't. It Moved It.

Descripción

The promise of ECDS was real: real-time digital data replacing expensive, retrospective chart retrieval. The operational reality of MY2026 is more complicated. In this episode, Peter Saah breaks down exactly where the data quality problem went when hybrid reporting gave way to ECDS — why COL-E rates have been declining under ECDS since MY2024, why BPC-E is about to produce the same challenge at larger scale, why the administrative-to-ECDS shift for measures like SPC-E requires clinical data infrastructure most plans haven't built, and what the integrated operational model actually looks like when digital data collection, targeted chart retrieval, and abstraction quality work together correctly. This episode is for health plan quality directors, VPs of operations, and HEDIS program leads who have invested in ECDS transition and are now asking why the gaps are not closing the way the technology promised. Topics covered: → What ECDS was designed to fix — and the published data showing COL-E rates declining under ECDS versus prior hybrid rates → Why NCQA's "no large population impact" statement and member-level closure failures are measuring two different things → BPC-E: why blood pressure evidence under ECDS is the hardest clinical data to normalize and why it will expose data infrastructure gaps at scale in MY2026 → Why SPC-E represents a category shift — pharmacy and administrative measures now requiring integrated clinical data infrastructure most plans weren't built for → The three simultaneous data programs most MA plans are running in MY2026 — and what nobody budgeted for in the governance layer → Why chart retrieval is not over — it is being repositioned as a prospective completion mechanism for the members ECDS data can't close alone → The audit exposure that increases when you add ECDS data sources without adding measure-level validation infrastructure → What the integrated operational model looks like when CCD processing, targeted retrieval, and abstraction quality work as one pipeline Pilot inquiries — CCD data processing, chart retrieval, abstraction:https://poderohealth.com/Contact Connect with Peter Saah: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dr-peter-saah-dba-cphq-0b50a572/ Website: poderohealth.com ___________________________________________________ © Podero Health. All rights reserved.

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22 episodios

Portada del episodio Season 1 Ep10 | Why the Chart You Retrieved May Be More Valuable Than You Think

Season 1 Ep10 | Why the Chart You Retrieved May Be More Valuable Than You Think

Episode 11: The Evidence Utilization Gap — Why the Chart You Retrieved May Be More Valuable Than You Think Most Medicare Advantage plans have become very good at retrieving clinical evidence. Very few have become equally good at utilizing it. In this episode of The Execution Gap Podcast, Peter Saah introduces the concept of the Evidence Utilization Gap — the difference between the evidence an organization acquires and the value it actually extracts from that evidence. The central argument is simple: Many plans have already paid for the evidence they need. They simply haven't extracted all the value from it. Peter explores why the chart itself isn't the asset — the evidence inside the chart is — and why treating evidence as a departmental resource instead of an enterprise asset may be creating one of the largest hidden inefficiencies in Medicare Advantage operations today. From HEDIS and risk adjustment to RADV readiness and provider abrasion, this episode examines what happens when organizations focus on evidence acquisition but underinvest in evidence utilization. * Why the chart isn't the asset — the evidence is * The Evidence Utilization Gap and why it matters * The "dual-use chart" and the hidden value inside retrieved records * Why the most expensive chart in healthcare may be the one you've already retrieved but never fully utilized * CMS-HCC V28 and the growing importance of documentation specificity * RADV expansion and the increasing importance of evidence traceability * Why chart retrieval and abstraction should be viewed as enterprise capabilities * The provider abrasion cost of duplicate retrieval workflows * The CFO Test: explaining your evidence workflow to finance leadership * The difference between evidence acquisition and evidence utilization * Why the organizations that win may not retrieve the most charts — they may simply extract the most value from every chart they retrieve Key Takeaways: Retrieval is an activity. Evidence utilization is an outcome. The plans that perform best over the next decade may not be the ones retrieving the most charts. They may be the ones extracting the most value from every chart they retrieve. Pilot inquiries: poderohealth.com/demo Connect with Peter Saah on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dr-peter-saah-dba-mba-pmp-cphq-0b50a572/ Website: poderohealth.com

Ayer17 min
Portada del episodio Season 1 Ep9 | The Audit Readiness Gap: Why a Closed Gap Is Not the Same Thing as an Audit-Ready Gap

Season 1 Ep9 | The Audit Readiness Gap: Why a Closed Gap Is Not the Same Thing as an Audit-Ready Gap

Episode 9: The Audit Readiness Gap Most healthcare quality teams focus on collecting evidence. Far fewer focus on whether that evidence can be defended. In this episode, Peter Saah explores a growing challenge facing health plans as ECDS reporting expands: the difference between a closed gap and an audit-ready gap. Using a practical framework built around evidence acquisition, validation, and interpretation, Peter explains why audit readiness is not an audit-season activity—it is a production discipline that starts with the first chart retrieved, the first CCD processed, and the first abstraction decision recorded. Topics include: • What audit readiness actually means • Why evidence can be clinically correct but still create audit exposure • The three most common audit failure modes • How ECDS increases the importance of source validation and traceability • The Audit Defensibility Framework • Why high-performing plans build audit readiness into daily operations This episode is intended for healthcare quality leaders, HEDIS professionals, Medicare Stars teams, population health leaders, and health plan executives navigating the transition toward increasingly digital quality measurement. Learn more about Podero Health at: https://www.poderohealth.com [https://www.poderohealth.com/] Request a pilot: https://www.poderohealth.com/demo [https://www.poderohealth.com/demo]

9 de jun de 202611 min
Portada del episodio Season 1 Ep8 | Your ECDS Data Is Only as Good as Your Provider’s EHR Workflow

Season 1 Ep8 | Your ECDS Data Is Only as Good as Your Provider’s EHR Workflow

Episode 8: Your ECDS Data Is Only as Good as Your Provider's EHR WorkflowMost discussions about ECDS focus on interoperability, CCD ingestion, FHIR, data exchanges, and measure engines.But what if the biggest ECDS performance problem starts before any of that?What if the determining factor is the way providers document care at the point of care?In this episode of *The Execution Gap*, Peter Saah explores one of the least discussed drivers of ECDS performance: **documentation maturity**.The reality is that two providers can deliver the exact same care to the exact same patient and produce two completely different reporting outcomes. One workflow generates measure-ready data. The other generates clinically meaningful documentation that never becomes compliant evidence.The result?Care happened.Documentation exists.The measure stays open.This episode breaks down why provider workflow design has become one of the strongest predictors of ECDS success, how health plans can identify documentation maturity gaps across their network, and why many organizations are investing in downstream technology to solve an upstream workflow problem.---### In This Episode✅ What NCQA's ECDS guidance reveals about provider readiness✅ Why documentation maturity matters as much as data exchange maturity✅ The difference between clinically meaningful documentation and measure-ready data✅ How the same clinical event can produce completely different ECDS outcomes✅ Why your provider network is not a uniform data environment✅ The provider segmentation analysis most plans have never run✅ How to identify providers generating structurally incomplete ECDS data✅ When targeted chart retrieval becomes the right operational response✅ Why ECDS performance often reflects provider workflow design more than technology investments---### Key Takeaway**Most plans segment providers by performance. Very few segment providers by documentation maturity.**As ECDS adoption expands, documentation maturity may become one of the strongest predictors of quality performance.---### About Podero HealthPodero Health helps health plans improve quality performance through:• CCD processing and evidence normalization• Documentation maturity analysis• Provider-network segmentation• Targeted chart retrieval• AI-assisted clinical abstraction with human validation• Audit-ready evidence workflows---🌐 Website: www.poderohealth.com📩 Pilot Inquiries: www.poderohealth.com/demo🔗 Connect with Peter Saah on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dr-peter-saah-dba-cphq-0b50a572/---### Timestamps00:00 — Where ECDS Performance Really Begins00:30 — Why Provider Workflow Matters01:20 — What NCQA Is Really Telling Us03:00 — The Documentation Gap Explained05:20 — Your Provider Network Is Not Uniform07:30 — Three Operational Implications09:30 — The Analysis Most Plans Should Run10:50 — Closing Thoughts#ECDS #HEDIS #MedicareStars #QualityImprovement #HealthcareQuality #HealthPlan #PopulationHealth #ClinicalData #Interoperability #FHIR #CCD #DigitalQuality #HealthcareOperations #QualityManagement #ProviderData #NCQA #MedicareAdvantage #HealthcareAnalytics #PoderoHealth #TheExecutionGapPodcast

4 de jun de 202613 min
Portada del episodio Season 1 Ep7: ECDS Was Supposed to Solve the Data Quality Problem. It Didn't. It Moved It.

Season 1 Ep7: ECDS Was Supposed to Solve the Data Quality Problem. It Didn't. It Moved It.

The promise of ECDS was real: real-time digital data replacing expensive, retrospective chart retrieval. The operational reality of MY2026 is more complicated. In this episode, Peter Saah breaks down exactly where the data quality problem went when hybrid reporting gave way to ECDS — why COL-E rates have been declining under ECDS since MY2024, why BPC-E is about to produce the same challenge at larger scale, why the administrative-to-ECDS shift for measures like SPC-E requires clinical data infrastructure most plans haven't built, and what the integrated operational model actually looks like when digital data collection, targeted chart retrieval, and abstraction quality work together correctly. This episode is for health plan quality directors, VPs of operations, and HEDIS program leads who have invested in ECDS transition and are now asking why the gaps are not closing the way the technology promised. Topics covered: → What ECDS was designed to fix — and the published data showing COL-E rates declining under ECDS versus prior hybrid rates → Why NCQA's "no large population impact" statement and member-level closure failures are measuring two different things → BPC-E: why blood pressure evidence under ECDS is the hardest clinical data to normalize and why it will expose data infrastructure gaps at scale in MY2026 → Why SPC-E represents a category shift — pharmacy and administrative measures now requiring integrated clinical data infrastructure most plans weren't built for → The three simultaneous data programs most MA plans are running in MY2026 — and what nobody budgeted for in the governance layer → Why chart retrieval is not over — it is being repositioned as a prospective completion mechanism for the members ECDS data can't close alone → The audit exposure that increases when you add ECDS data sources without adding measure-level validation infrastructure → What the integrated operational model looks like when CCD processing, targeted retrieval, and abstraction quality work as one pipeline Pilot inquiries — CCD data processing, chart retrieval, abstraction:https://poderohealth.com/Contact Connect with Peter Saah: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dr-peter-saah-dba-cphq-0b50a572/ Website: poderohealth.com ___________________________________________________ © Podero Health. All rights reserved.

28 de may de 202618 min
Portada del episodio Season 1 Ep6 | You Don't Have a Retrieval Problem. You Have an Abstraction Problem

Season 1 Ep6 | You Don't Have a Retrieval Problem. You Have an Abstraction Problem

The care happened. The physician documented it. The chart was retrieved. The evidence existed. And the measure still stayed open. That is not a retrieval failure. That is an abstraction failure. And it is one of the least measured — but most financially consequential — problems in payer quality operations today. In Episode 6 of The Execution Podcast, Peter Saah breaks down exactly where abstraction fails, why your vendor's sub-one-percent error rate doesn't tell you what you think it does, why AI-assisted abstraction shifts the judgment layer without eliminating it, and what the plans managing abstraction well actually do differently. This episode is for health plan quality directors, VPs of operations, and HEDIS program leads who want to understand why Stars performance keeps coming in below forecast — and why the answer may not be in their retrieval rate at all. --- WHAT YOU'LL LEARN IN THIS EPISODE: → Why most Stars misses are not missing care — they are wrong interpretation of care that was already documented and retrieved → Why vendor-reported sub-1% error rates measure internal consistency — not whether the shared interpretation logic is correct against the measure specification → Why AI-assisted abstraction (NLP, evidence extraction) shifts the judgment layer without eliminating it — and the three failure modes that remain in the human decision layer on top of AI output → The seven ways abstraction fails in real HEDIS production environments — from clinical misinterpretation and specification misapplication to the silent failure that leaves no trace in the system → Why COL-E has five different lookback windows by procedure type — and why misclassifying CT colonography and optical colonoscopy is a material error, not a cosmetic one → The three root causes behind all seven failure modes: interpretation variance, specification complexity, and unmeasured human adjudication accuracy → The financial calculation that connects abstraction error rates to Stars measure weighting — and why the same error rate on a high-weight measure costs materially more than on a lower-weight one → Why Q4 abstraction accuracy is systematically lower than Q2 — and why most plans don't staff for it → Four specific operational practices that separate plans managing abstraction from plans assuming it works ABOUT THE EXECUTION PODCAST: The Execution Podcast is hosted by Peter Saah, DBA, MBA, CPHQ — CEO and Co-Founder of Podero Health. Each episode covers the operational realities of HEDIS performance, Stars strategy, and quality data execution for health plan leaders. No fluff. No vendor pitch. Just what's actually happening in quality operations — and what to do about it. New episodes drop regularly on Spotify and YouTube. --- PODERO HEALTH: Podero Health helps health plans validate and close care gaps at the data layer — ensuring that chart retrieval, EMR feeds, lab feeds, and CCD data actually satisfy HEDIS measure specifications, not just land in a system. Request a demo or pilot: https://poderohealth.com/Contact Connect with Peter Saah on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dr-peter-saah-dba-cphq-0b50a572/ Website: poderohealth.com --- © Podero Health. All rights reserved.

22 de may de 202618 min