Managed Healthcare Executive June 24, 2025
Women primary care providers (PCPs) treating Medicare patients in a value-based care model achieved better patient outcomes and earned more per patient than male counterparts, despite receiving equal patient satisfaction ratings, highlighting a potential for value-based payment to help close the gender pay gap.
Women primary care providers (PCPs) treating Medicare patients in a value-based care setting have equal or better patient outcomes than men PCPs in the same setting, despite having the same overall patient satisfaction rating, according to a recent study sponsored by agilon health, published May 16 in JAMA Health Forum. Women PCPs ranked higher than their men counterparts in terms of revenue, emergency room utilization, and diabetic and patient outcomes, but both men and women PCPs...







