Healthcare Innovation February 7, 2024
Workgroup also recommends that the state should report annually on primary care spending as a percentage of total healthcare spending
With New Jersey lagging behind other states on adoption of alternative payment models (APMs), a workgroup of stakeholders and subject matter experts has developed recommendations to support advanced primary care in New Jersey.
The New Jersey Health Care Quality Institute was engaged by the New Jersey Department of Human Services to conduct a market scan of primary care, including alternative payment models (APMs) currently in use in New Jersey. A workgroup then developed several recommendations for the state.
The report found that primary care physicians are interested in moving away from fee-for-service (FFS) models to Advanced Primary Care models,...