Medicare’s new payment model is built for AI, and most of the tech world has no idea
There is no governmental mechanism to pay for an AI agent that monitors a patient between visits, calls to check in, coordinates a housing referral, or makes sure someone picks up their medication. ACCESS creates that mechanism for the first time.
Neil Batlivala has spent seven years building a healthcare company that most of the tech industry has never heard of and that serves a patient population most of Silicon Valley ignores. But last month, that work put him at the center of something much bigger.
His company, Pair Team , announced on April 30 it had been accepted into ACCESS , a Medicare program — as one of 150 participants chosen by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to test what AI-driven medical care could look like at federal scale. The program goes live July 5.
“The government is creating swim lanes for AI innovation in traditionally regulated industries,” he told me over a Zoom call a few days later. “The best solution wins, which, in regulated industries like healthcare — that’s not been the case.”
ACCESS — Advancing Chronic Care with Effective, Scalable Solutions — is a 10-year CMS program testing a payment model that rewards health outcomes rather than required activities (like a certain number of check-ins). Participating organizations like Pair Team receive predictable payments for managing qualifying conditions and earn the full amount only when patients meet measurable health goals, like lower blood pressure or reduced pain. It covers diabetes, hypertension, chronic kidney disease, obesity, depression, and anxiety.
That payment structure is the real news.
Traditional Medicare reimburses based on time spent with a clinician. There’s no mechanism to pay for an AI agent that monitors a patient between visits, calls to check in, coordinates a housing referral, or makes sure someone picks up their medication. ACCESS creates that mechanism for the first time.
“It’s a payment model transformation,” Batlivala said. “You just couldn’t do this before.”
The first cohort spans a wide range of participants — AI doctor startups, virtual nutrition therapy providers, connected device companies, and wearable makers like Whoop. Batlivala is skeptical of some of them.
"I'm a big fan of wearables, but for a senior who's struggling with food insecurity, I don't know how much Whoop is going to be able to do," he said, adding of his own company, "We've been building toward this for five-plus years now."
Pair Team launched in 2019 with a specific kind of patient in mind: people managing chronic conditions who were also dealing with unstable housing, too little food, or lack of transportation. About a third of Americans fall somewhere in that category.
The company's premise was that you can't improve health outcomes without addressing the full context of someone's life. It now employs roughly 850 clinical professionals, runs what it describes as the largest community health workforce in California, and, per Batlivala, generates revenue above nine figures. It has raised about $30 million, backed by Kleiner Perkins, Kraft Ventures, and Next Ventures.
The model has peer-reviewed evidence behind it. A study, co-authored by Pair Team researchers and peer-reviewed by the Journal of General Internal Medicine , evaluated Pair Team's community-integrated model, which blends medical, behavioral, and social care for Medicaid members with high rates of homelessness, serious mental illness, and chronic disease and it showed strong patient engagement and significant reductions in avoidable emergency and inpatient utilization. Batlivala says one in four hospital visits and one in two ER visits don't happen when a patient is in his company's care.
But for years, delivering that level of care required human teams, which limited how fast and cheaply it could scale. Then, about nine months ago, Pair Team deployed a voice AI agent called Flora as its primary patient-facing interface. Flora is available 24 hours a day, handles intake, coordinates referrals, and does the check-ins that keep patients engaged between clinical visits.
The first call that shifted his thinking was with a 67-year-old woman living out of her car, managing PTSD and congestive heart failure. She spoke with Flora for over an hour. "It was both incredible and depressing," Batlivala told me. "Flora was probably the only 'person' she'd talked to in weeks about her situation." Now, hour-long conversations with Flora are routine. "That's the companionship piece," he said. "And it turns out that is truly an intervention."
The architects of ACCESS are themselves former startup operators. The program was designed by Abe Sutton, Director of the CMS Innovation Center, and Jacob Shiff, Chief AI and Technology Officer of the CMS Innovation Center. Sutton was previously a venture capitalist at a healthcare fund called Rubicon Founders. Shiff is a former healthcare founder. Both joined CMS under the Trump administration and their startup backgrounds are reflected in the program's design: outcome-based payments, direct-to-consumer enrollment, and a deliberate push for competition.
There are real risks. Participants are feeding extraordinarily sensitive patient data — intimate conversations about housing and diseases and mental illness — into a federal infrastructure with a documented history of breaches, including exposed Social Security numbers . For the vulnerable populations ACCESS is designed to serve, that's not an impractical concern.
There are financial risks, too. The track record of CMS innovation programs is mixed. A 2023 Congressional Budget Office analysis found that the CMS Innovation Center increased federal spending by $5.4 billion during its first decade rather than producing the projected savings. CMS is also paying less per patient per month than many participants anticipated, which means the math only works for organizations that have fully automated most of their patient interactions.
Batlivala's answer to the reimbursement concern is that it's a feature, not a bug. "If you want to build a model that truly incentivizes the use of AI, the reimbursement rates have to be low," he told me. "The economics only work if you're running a lean, AI-first operation."
Pair Team says it right now has partnerships in place that give it access to roughly 500,000 potential patients, and that it wants to reach a million within three years.
Healthcare investors have been watching this closely. Digital health funding hit its highest Q1 total since the pandemic this year, with AI companies capturing the bulk of it. But ACCESS has barely registered outside health tech trade press.
When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission . This doesn’t affect our editorial independence.
StrictlyVC Athens is up next. Hear unfiltered insights straight from Europe’s tech leaders and connect with the people shaping what’s ahead. Lock in your spot before it’s gone.
Fintech startup Parker files for bankruptcy Anthony Ha
Fintech startup Parker files for bankruptcy
Fintech startup Parker files for bankruptcy
Laid-off Oracle workers tried to negotiate better severance. Oracle said no. Julie Bort
Laid-off Oracle workers tried to negotiate better severance. Oracle said no.
Laid-off Oracle workers tried to negotiate better severance. Oracle said no.
San Francisco’s housing market has lost its mind Connie Loizos
San Francisco’s housing market has lost its mind
San Francisco’s housing market has lost its mind
US defense contractor who sold hacking tools to Russian broker ordered to pay $10M to former employers Lorenzo Franceschi-Bicchierai
US defense contractor who sold hacking tools to Russian broker ordered to pay $10M to former employers
US defense contractor who sold hacking tools to Russian broker ordered to pay $10M to former employers
Hackers deface school login pages after claiming another Instructure hack Lorenzo Franceschi-Bicchierai Zack Whittaker
Hackers deface school login pages after claiming another Instructure hack
Hackers deface school login pages after claiming another Instructure hack
Google unveils Whoop-like screenless Fitbit Air Aisha Malik
Google unveils Whoop-like screenless Fitbit Air
Google unveils Whoop-like screenless Fitbit Air
Five architects of the AI economy explain where the wheels are coming off Connie Loizos
Five architects of the AI economy explain where the wheels are coming off
Five architects of the AI economy explain where the wheels are coming off
Pontos-chave
- O modelo ACCESS do Medicare transforma o financiamento da saúde, priorizando resultados em vez de atividades.
- A experiência de empresas como a Pair Team pode inspirar inovações no Brasil, focando em populações vulneráveis.
- O sucesso do ACCESS pode influenciar políticas públicas e a aceitação de tecnologias emergentes na saúde.
Análise editorial
A introdução do modelo de pagamento ACCESS pelo Medicare representa uma mudança significativa na forma como os serviços de saúde são financiados, especialmente em um contexto onde a tecnologia de IA pode desempenhar um papel crucial. Para o setor de tecnologia brasileiro, isso abre um leque de oportunidades, uma vez que soluções baseadas em IA podem ser desenvolvidas para atender a uma população que, muitas vezes, é negligenciada. A experiência de Neil Batlivala e sua empresa Pair Team ilustra a importância de focar em grupos vulneráveis, um aspecto que pode ser replicado no Brasil, onde a desigualdade no acesso à saúde é um desafio constante.
Além disso, a transformação do modelo de pagamento para um que recompensa resultados de saúde, em vez de atividades prescritas, pode incentivar inovações que priorizam a eficácia e a eficiência. Isso pode levar a um aumento no investimento em startups de saúde digital no Brasil, especialmente aquelas que utilizam IA para monitoramento remoto e intervenções personalizadas. O desafio será garantir que essas tecnologias sejam acessíveis e adaptáveis às realidades locais.
É importante observar como o ACCESS pode influenciar a regulamentação e a aceitação de tecnologias emergentes em setores tradicionalmente regulados, como a saúde. À medida que o Brasil avança em sua própria jornada de digitalização da saúde, o aprendizado com iniciativas como o ACCESS pode informar políticas públicas e estratégias de implementação que incentivem a inovação, ao mesmo tempo que garantam a proteção dos pacientes.
Por fim, o que se deve acompanhar é a evolução dos resultados de saúde dos pacientes que participam do programa ACCESS. O sucesso ou fracasso desse modelo pode servir de referência para futuras iniciativas no Brasil, especialmente em um momento em que a saúde digital está se tornando cada vez mais relevante. A capacidade de medir e demonstrar resultados tangíveis será crucial para a aceitação e expansão de modelos semelhantes no Brasil e em outros mercados emergentes.
O que esta cobertura entrega
- Atribuicao clara de fonte com link para a publicacao original.
- Enquadramento editorial sobre relevancia, impacto e proximos desdobramentos.
- Revisao de legibilidade, contexto e duplicacao antes da publicacao.
Fonte original:
TechCrunch AISobre este artigo
Este artigo foi curado e publicado pelo AIDaily como parte da nossa cobertura editorial sobre desenvolvimentos em inteligência artificial. O conteúdo é baseado na fonte original citada abaixo, enriquecido com contexto e análise editorial. Ferramentas automatizadas podem auxiliar tradução e estruturação inicial, mas a decisão de publicar, a revisão factual e o enquadramento de contexto seguem responsabilidade editorial.
Saiba mais sobre nosso processo editorial