ACCESS,
Chronic Care, and the CMMI Savings Paradox
When Better Care for Under-Managed Patients May Cost More
|
CMS’s ACCESS model is a serious
attempt to modernize Medicare payment for technology-enabled chronic care.
Rather than paying for visits, devices, app clicks, or care-management
minutes, ACCESS pays organizations for measurable improvement in chronic disease
outcomes — an elegant and potentially important idea. But it also exposes a
deeper CMMI paradox: under-managed Medicare patients may need more care, not
less. Better management can mean more drugs, physical therapy, behavioral
health, monitoring, labs, and specialist follow-up. Judged too narrowly on
savings, ACCESS may reward low-cost metric improvement while discouraging the
costly care activation patients actually need. |
Bruce Quinn
Associates LLC · June 8, 2026
CMS’s ACCESS model is one of the most intellectually coherent CMMI models
in recent years, and one of the most revealing. On its surface it is a
voluntary Medicare demonstration for technology-supported chronic care,
creating new payments for organizations that manage common chronic conditions:
hypertension, dyslipidemia, obesity, prediabetes, diabetes, chronic kidney
disease, atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, chronic musculoskeletal pain,
depression, and anxiety.
