AMGA Launches Accountable Care Organization Learning Collaboratives

Comments
Print

ALEXANDRIA, Va.—The American Medical Group Association (AMGA) announced April 23 that it will launch two collaboratives focused on practical steps toward creating accountable care organizations.

The collaboratives will offer access to content experts and provide a forum in which peer organizations can learn from one another as they begin to build and refine business and care processes to develop high-quality, efficient, and sustainable systems of care that provide high-value care to their patients and communities.

ACOs are one of the key efforts of the recent healthcare reform legislation that address the two greatest challenges, according to AMGA,  facing U.S. healthcare: unsustainable escalation of costs that threaten the affordability of care and care that is fragmented, poorly coordinated with little accountability for the outcomes of care.

The ACO concept couples payment and delivery systems reforms that may have the opportunity to bend the cost curve while improving access and quality.

“AMGA’s ACO collabortives will bring together some of the nation’s foremost medical group leaders that have pioneered the delivery of accountable care. We believe their experiences will assist all interested provider organizations that wish to move to the level of high-performing healthcare delivery systems and learning organizations” said Donald W. Fisher, PhD, AMGA president and CEO.

AMGA is offering two different learning collaboratives that will both be kept apprised of legislative and regulatory development concerning ACOs.

The AMGA ACO Development Collaborative will guide member organizations through a structured assessment of their readiness to become an ACO. The participants will:

  • Examine the structural and governance components of ACOs 
  •  Learn what is required to function as an ACO
  • Explore new business opportunities that should be considered
  • Assess their organization’s readiness function as an ACO
  • Receive case studies of functioning ACOs from which operational challenges and solutions will be shared.

The AMGA ACO Implementation Collaborative will assist members to:

  • Design and implement governance structures that support aligned vision and mission
  • Design, organize, and manage efficient and effective clinical delivery systems
  • Integrate care across time, settings, disciplines, and geographies
  • Develop and implement systems that account for cost and quality
  • Develop methodologies that support innovative pricing and distribution of premium dollars and shared savings

Both collaboratives will be kept apprised of legislative and regulatory development concerning ACOs.

Comments