The Execution Gap

Season 1 Ep13 | Three Questions Every Medicare Advantage Executive Should Be Asking Right Now?

14 min · I går
episode Season 1 Ep13 | Three Questions Every Medicare Advantage Executive Should Be Asking Right Now? cover

Beskrivelse

The Medicare Advantage Stars program may be entering a new era—one where methodology decisions are increasingly challenged not only through policy channels, but in court. The Clover Health and Elevance Health cases raise important questions for Medicare Advantage executives and quality leaders. But this episode is not about predicting how the courts will rule. Instead, I examine three questions every Medicare Advantage executive should be asking right now: 1. Are we entering a new era of Medicare Advantage governance? 2. Should quality leaders be paying more attention to policy than they did five years ago? 3. What should organizations do while the courts decide? The bigger issue is not one lawsuit or one Star Rating methodology. It is how Medicare Advantage organizations should operate when quality performance, reimbursement, regulation, methodology, and litigation increasingly intersect. For quality leaders, the lesson is clear: execution still matters—but understanding the rules shaping execution matters too. The Execution Gap explores the operational realities behind healthcare quality, evidence, HEDIS, Medicare Advantage, and the work required to turn strategy into defensible execution. #MedicareAdvantage #StarRatings #HealthcareQuality #HEDIS #CMS #QualityImprovement #HealthPlans #TheExecutionGap Find me on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dr-peter-saah-dba-mba-pmp-cphq-0b50a572/

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Alle episoder

25 Episoder

episode Season 1 Ep13 | Three Questions Every Medicare Advantage Executive Should Be Asking Right Now? cover

Season 1 Ep13 | Three Questions Every Medicare Advantage Executive Should Be Asking Right Now?

The Medicare Advantage Stars program may be entering a new era—one where methodology decisions are increasingly challenged not only through policy channels, but in court. The Clover Health and Elevance Health cases raise important questions for Medicare Advantage executives and quality leaders. But this episode is not about predicting how the courts will rule. Instead, I examine three questions every Medicare Advantage executive should be asking right now: 1. Are we entering a new era of Medicare Advantage governance? 2. Should quality leaders be paying more attention to policy than they did five years ago? 3. What should organizations do while the courts decide? The bigger issue is not one lawsuit or one Star Rating methodology. It is how Medicare Advantage organizations should operate when quality performance, reimbursement, regulation, methodology, and litigation increasingly intersect. For quality leaders, the lesson is clear: execution still matters—but understanding the rules shaping execution matters too. The Execution Gap explores the operational realities behind healthcare quality, evidence, HEDIS, Medicare Advantage, and the work required to turn strategy into defensible execution. #MedicareAdvantage #StarRatings #HealthcareQuality #HEDIS #CMS #QualityImprovement #HealthPlans #TheExecutionGap Find me on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dr-peter-saah-dba-mba-pmp-cphq-0b50a572/

I går14 min
episode Season 1 Ep 12 | The AI Abstraction Myth: Why Reading Charts Was Never the Hard Part cover

Season 1 Ep 12 | The AI Abstraction Myth: Why Reading Charts Was Never the Hard Part

Artificial intelligence has changed medical record abstraction. But it hasn't changed the most important question. Can your organization trust the evidence it's submitting? In this episode of The Execution Gap, Dr. Peter Saah explores why the future of healthcare quality isn't about reading charts faster—it's about consistently producing evidence that is compliant, audit-ready, and defensible. While AI has become remarkably effective at reviewing medical records and identifying potential evidence, health plans still carry the responsibility of determining what actually satisfies measure specifications. That's where the real work begins. In this episode, you'll learn: * Why reading charts was never the hardest part of abstraction * The critical difference between information and evidence * Why AI identifies findings—but organizations determine whether they count * The Evidence Lifecycle: Information → Candidate Evidence → Trusted Evidence * Why judgment remains essential in AI-assisted abstraction * The operational metrics quality leaders should be measuring * Where the next competitive advantage in Medicare Advantage will come from This episode is for healthcare leaders responsible for HEDIS®, Medicare Stars, Quality Improvement, Risk Adjustment, Medical Record Abstraction, Clinical Operations, and Audit Readiness. Key takeaway: Technology can find information. Organizations create confidence. If you're leading quality operations in an AI-enabled world, this conversation will challenge how you think about abstraction, evidence, and the role of organizational judgment in producing trusted outcomes. Find me on Linkedin - https://www.linkedin.com/in/dr-peter-saah-dba-mba-pmp-cphq-0b50a572/ Pilot inquiries: poderohealth.com/demo Website: poderohealth.com

4. juli 202615 min
episode Season 1 Ep11 | The Retrieval Yield Gap: Why More Charts Don't Mean Better Results cover

Season 1 Ep11 | The Retrieval Yield Gap: Why More Charts Don't Mean Better Results

Most health plans measure chart retrieval volume. Very few measure retrieval value. In this episode of The Execution Gap, Dr. Peter Saah introduces the concept of the Retrieval Yield Gap and explains why retrieving more charts does not automatically create more value. A health plan can retrieve thousands of records, hit every retrieval target, and still see little improvement in measure performance, audit readiness, or Stars outcomes. The real question isn't: "How many charts did we retrieve?" The real question is: "What value did those charts create?" In this episode, you'll learn: • Why retrieval volume and retrieval value are not the same thing • The Retrieval Yield framework • The Retrieval Yield Pyramid • How to identify high-value retrieval opportunities • Why some gap closures never survive audit review • The hidden cost of False Yield • How CCD data and medical records play different roles in evidence strategy • Why the same chart is worth more in March than it is in October • The three questions every health plan should ask before retrieving a chart If you're responsible for HEDIS®, Stars, ECDS, quality improvement, risk adjustment, chart retrieval, abstraction operations, or audit readiness, this episode will challenge how you think about evidence collection and performance improvement. Because retrieval volume measures effort. Retrieval yield measures impact. #HealthcareQuality #HEDIS #MedicareAdvantage #StarsRatings #PopulationHealth #RiskAdjustment #ECDS #MedicalRecords #ChartRetrieval #QualityImprovement #HealthcareAnalytics #AuditReadiness #HealthcareOperations

23. juni 202616 min
episode Season 1 Ep10 | Why the Chart You Retrieved May Be More Valuable Than You Think cover

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

12. juni 202617 min
episode Season 1 Ep9 | The Audit Readiness Gap: Why a Closed Gap Is Not the Same Thing as an Audit-Ready Gap cover

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. juni 202611 min