Weekly Roundup -
January 28, 2026
Smart. Strategic. Essential.
Unmatched Healthcare Insights from ϲ,
Leavitt Partners & Wakely.
Featured:
Webinar Replay – 2027 ACA Considerations: Proposed NBPP and Other Key Changes and Trends
ACCESS WEBINARWebinar Replay – Meeting the Healthcare Needs of Unhoused People Part 2: State Policy Responses
ACCESS WEBINARTrending: In Focus
CMS Releases 2027 Advance Notice with Medicare Advantage and Part D Rates
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) released the on January 26, 2026. The Advance Notice begins CMS’s annual rate-setting cycle and describes proposed updates to Medicare Advantage (MA) growth rates, benchmark rebasing, risk adjustment, Star Ratings, and Part D payment parameters. CMS previously released a in November2025that included policy changesto the Star Ratings systemand enrollment policies forMA and Part Dstarting incontract year2027.(Readtheϲ(ϲ)summaryhere.)
Comments onthe Advance Notice are due February 25, 2026, andCMS will publish the final CY 2027rateannouncement no later than April 6, 2026.
This article provides an earlylook at theproposedmethodologicalupdates anddraft capitationrates.Wakely, an ϲCompany, will publish a detailed analysis of theAdvance Noticein earlyFebruary.
Payment Impact on Medicare Advantage Organizations
CMS estimates a national per capitaMAgrowth rate of5.10percent from 2026 to 2027, with fee-for-service (FFS) non-end-stage renal disease (non-ESRD) growth of 5.10 percent and FFS dialysis end-stage renal disease (ESRD) growth of 6.17 percent.
The5.10percent growth rate reflects projected increases in percapitaFFSMedicare spending forbeneficiaries who areaged/havedisabilitiesand serves as the primary driver of 2027 benchmark updates, interacting with rebasing and risk adjustment changes todeterminefinal capitation payments.The growth ratereflectsupdatestohow CMS pays for skin substitutesin the 2026 Medicare PhysicianFeeSchedule.These updates resulted in significantly lower projected costsand materially reducedthe growthrate.
These preliminary estimates inform the development of MA benchmarks and may change in the finalrateannouncement.
Table 1. Estimated Impact of Proposed Payment Changes on Medicare Advantage Plan Payments, CY 2027
| Year-to-Year Percentage Change | |
| Impact | CY 2027 Advance Notice |
| Effective Growth Rate | 4.97% |
| Rebasing/Re-pricing | TBD |
| Change in Star Ratings | -0.03% |
| MA Coding Pattern Adjustment | 0% |
| Risk Model Revision and Normalization | -3.32% |
| Sources of Diagnoses | -1.53% |
| Expected Average Change | 0.09% |
| Source:Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.2027 Medicare Advantage and Part D AdvanceNotice.January 26, 2026.Available at: https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/2027-medicare-advantage-part-d-advance-notice. | |
Medicare Advantage Benchmarks, Rebasing, and Risk Adjustment
The Advance Notice describes CMS’sapproach andchangesthatwillaffect paymenttoplans, including:
- Excluding from the risk adjustment process diagnoses submitted from chart reviews with unlinked claim records. In the Fact Sheet, CMS estimates this change will reduce Part C payments by 1.53 percent.
- RebasingcountyFFSrates for 2027 using 2020–2024 claims data, continuingCMS’spractice of updating benchmarks annually to reflect the most current FFS experience. The Advance Notice also reiterates the statutory framework for calculating benchmarks, including applicable and specified amounts, benchmark caps, and quality bonus payments.
- Updatingthe CMS Hierarchical Condition Category (CMS-HCC) and Prescription Drug Hierarchical Condition Category (RxHCC) risk adjustment models and associated normalization factors for CY 2027 andcontinuingto apply the statutory MA coding pattern difference adjustment to account for systematic differences in diagnosis coding between MA and FFS.
Quality Bonus Payments, Star Ratings, and Part D Updates
CMSstatesthat contracts with 4 or more Stars receive a 5percentage-point quality bonus, while new and low-enrollment contracts receive a 3.5percentage-point bonus. The Advance Notice also includes updates related to Part C and Part D Star Ratings measures and methodological refinements.
For Part D, CMS outlines proposed updates to the defined standard benefit parameters for CY 2027, as well as changes to Part D risk adjustment, normalization, premium stabilization, reinsurance, and risk-sharing, withadditionalpolicy context provided in the Contract Year 2027 Medicare Advantage and Part D proposed rule.
Connectwith Us
The CY 2027 Advance Notice provides early signals on benchmark growth, rebasing, and paymentmethodologychanges that will shape MA and Part D paymentsin2027. Stakeholders should begin evaluating the potential implications for bid development, benefit design, and financial performance as CMS moves towardfinalizingrates in April.
ϲ supports Medicare Advantage and Part D stakeholders with payment impact modeling, scenario analysis, and strategic advisory services related to benchmark rebasing, risk adjustment, Star Ratings, and Part D payment policy to help organizations prepare for the CY 2027rateannouncement.
For details about the finalized payment and policy rules,contact our featured experts, and.
CMS ACCESS Model: A New On-Ramp to Outcomes-Based, Tech-Enabled Care in Traditional Medicare
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Innovation Centerrecently published applications for its new (Advancing Chronic Care with Effective, Scalable Solutions), a 10-year voluntary initiative beginning July 2026. The model is designed to advance outcomes-based, technology-enabled care delivery in Original Medicare and aligns with the Innovation Center’s priorities of strengthening prevention, empowering beneficiaries, and promoting performance-based competition. ACCESS is particularly suited to organizations with mature clinical operations and data infrastructure, offering a new pathway for tech-supported services.
This article summarizes the model’sdesign, highlights key considerations for prospective applicants, and addressescommon questionsour Medicare and technology experts fieldedduringa recent Health ManagementAssociates (ϲ)/Leavitt Partnerswebinar.
What the ACCESS Model Is Testing
ACCESS evaluates whether Outcome-Aligned Payments (OAPs)—recurring payments contingent on measurable clinical improvement—can reduce spending while maintaining or improving quality for beneficiaries with chronic conditions. The model tests whether incentivizing technology supported care can produce reliable clinical outcomes while complementing traditional care delivery.
Whomayparticipate? Organizations must be Medicare Part B–enrolled providers or suppliers (excluding DMEPOS [Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies] and labs). Participants may enroll beneficiaries directly, operate across multiple clinical tracks, and manage all qualifying conditions within each selected track. Beneficiary participation is voluntary, and individuals may switch ACCESS participants every 90 days.
Clinical tracks. At launch, the four clinical tracks reflect high-prevalence chronic conditions with established care pathways and strong evidence for technology-supported interventions:
- Early Cardio-Kidney-Metabolic (eCKM)
- Cardio-Kidney-Metabolic (CKM)
- Musculoskeletal (MSK)
- Behavioral Health (BH)
Payment.OAPs vary by track and performance period. CMS pays aportionprospectivelyeach quarter and withholds50 percentpending reconciliation based on:
- Clinical outcomes attainment: The percentage of aligned beneficiaries who complete the 12‑month performance period and achieve track‑specific clinical targets relative to their baseline.
- Substitute‑spend test: Ensures beneficiaries do not receive duplicativefee-for-service (FFS)services for conditions managed under ACCESS.
Technology and data exchange. ACCESStakes atech-forwardapproach.Key expectationsincludeuse ofFast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR®) based Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) for eligibility, consent, claims sharing, and care coordination—part of the broader federal push to modernize the health data ecosystem. CMS also plans to publish a public directory that lists participants, tracks, cost-sharing policies, and risk-adjusted outcomes to enable consumer and clinician choice.
Regulatory coordination. To complement ACCESS and expand the pipeline oftechnology-supportedinterventions,the US Food and Drug Administration’s(FDA) (Technology-Enabled Meaningful Patient Outcomes) allows selected US-based digital health device manufacturers to participate while generating real-world evidence. Up to 40 device manufacturers may participate across clinical areas.
This coordinated CMSFDA effort is intended to reduce barriers to innovation and accelerate access to safe, effective digital tools that can support chronic disease management.
Key Considerationsfor Applicants
Program integrity and fraud/abuse. CMS has emphasized program integrity across Medicare and Medicaid, and ACCESS reflects that emphasis. Applicants and their parent organizations should expect rigorous screening. Participants must also operationalize controls to pass the substitute spend test and maintain auditable evidence of outcomes and beneficiary consent.
Overlap withAccountable Care Organizations (ACOs)and other models. Patients may participate in ACCESS and be aligned with an ACO simultaneously; however, “participant overlap” raises important operational and financial issues. ACCESS includes an FFS exclusion policy that prohibits participants or affiliated entities from billing Medicare FFS for any services delivered to the same beneficiaries for the duration of their ACCESS episode. As a result, traditional providers, ACO-aligned clinicians, and integrated delivery systems must assess whether they can segment patient populations or if partnering is more feasible.
Eligibility and clinical scope. ACCESS is focused on relatively stable, chronically ill beneficiaries and excludes those with more acute/severe conditions. Participants must accept responsibility for all qualifying conditions a beneficiary has within a track.
Outcomesperformance. TheACCESS Model places substantialemphasis on clinicalperformanceand care coordination. Participantsare paid in full only if enough patients hit outcomes targets.Early cohorts willlikely skewtoward organizations with mature clinical protocols, robust engagement models, anddemonstratedoutcomes.Applicants shouldbefinanciallypreparedtotolerate withholds, beneficiary switching, andfollow-onperiod payment reductions after year one.
Digital infrastructure and interoperability. ACCESS presumes API-driven data exchange, including consent capture, eligibility checks, claims/clinical data integration, and bidirectional information sharing with the patient’s broader care team. Applicants should ensure they have a FHIR API server and meet the requirements described in the CMS .
Go-to-market and referral strategy. Beneficiary alignment is voluntary and will be facilitated by CMS’s planned public directory with risk-adjusted outcomes. Access participants will benefit from strong referral relationships—especially with ACOs and primary care providers—both to enroll eligible beneficiaries and to minimize substitute services. A field strategy grounded in evidence, patient engagement, and interoperability with local providers is critical to success.
Connect withUs
for the first ACCESS Model performance period are due April 1, 2026, with model launch in July 2026; applications submitted later would start January 1, 2027. Because ACCESS is a rolling, decade-long model, some organizations may choose to stage entry.
ACCESS is the most explicit Innovation Center opportunity to date on outcomes-based, tech-enabled chronic care in Traditional Medicare. It offers digital health and advanced care organizations a direct line to FFS beneficiaries with payment tied to results, not activities. Success will favor teams that combine clinical excellence, consumer-grade engagement, and API-level interoperability, as well as manage program integrity, ACO overlap, and beneficiary churn.
For questions or support assessing readiness, developing an application, or operationalizing the model, contactAmy Bassano,, orKate de Lisle.
Federal Policy News
Fueled By Weekly Health Intelligence
Senate Vote Looms on FY 2026 Appropriations as Shutdown Deadline Nears
Tomorrow, January 29, the Senate is scheduled to vote on , the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2026, which provides fiscal year (FY) 2026 appropriations for the (HHS), several other departments, and extends mandatory funding and authorities for key health programs.
The package requires 60 affirmative votes in the Senate to invoke cloture, requiring at least some Senate Democrats to vote to move past the procedural step. However, following recent events in Minnesota, several Senate Democrats are changes to the Department of Homeland Security appropriations bill within the package, and haveindicatedthey will withhold their support without formal revisions. Should the Senate amend the legislation, the House, which is currently in recess, would need to reconvene to vote on the revised package, making approval beforethe January30, 2026, funding deadline unlikely.
If Congress has not passed the appropriations bill by Saturday, the federal government will enter a partial shutdown, which will include the Department of Health and Human Services, except the Indian Health Service and US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), w already received appropriations for FY 2026. Further, USDA programs such as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC), which experienced disruptions during last year’s shutdown, have funding in place for FY 2026 and would not be affected. However, funding and authorities for several health care programs, including the Medicare Acute Hospital Care at Homewaiver will lapse, along with certain telehealth flexibilities.
CMS Releases New Notices on Domestic Supply Chains and MA Rates
OnMonday, January26, 2026,the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS)released anon “Ensuring Safety through Domestic Security with Made in America Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) and Essential Medicine Procurement Participating Hospitals.” The advance notice seeks public comment on a possible new “Secure American Medical Supplies” designation for Medicare participating hospitals thatdemonstratea commitment toprocuringdomestic PPE and essential medicines. The advance notice also requests feedback on:
- “streamlinedpayment policies” for hospitals with such adesignation;
- a structural measure within the Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting (IQR) program “requiring hospitals to attest to meeting domestic procurement designation minimum percentages for PPE and essential medicines;” and
- other policies within CMS’ authorities “to help foster a more resilient supply chain for domestically manufactured PPE and essential medicines.”
The public comment period will be open for60 days.
- One portion of the lower-than-anticipated payment update stems from a proposal to exclude certain diagnoses derived from audio-only services and “unlinked chart review records” from risk score calculations for risk adjustment purposes, although other proposed changes to MA’s risk adjustment model and Star Ratings program would have a projected impact as well.
The comment period for the proposals included in the Advance Notice will conclude on February 25, 2026, and the publication of the final rate announcement is slated for “no later than April 6, 2026.”
NIH Announces New Policies on Stem Cell and Fetal Tissue Research
Last week,the National Institutes of Health (NIH)announced multiple policy actions related to the use of embryonic stem cells and human fetal tissue in NIH-supported research.
- On January 23, NIHit hasreview and approval of new applications for the, and has issued a(RFI) on “reducing reliance on Human Embryonic Stem Cells in NIH-Supported research.” According to NIH, the agencyseekstoidentifyresearch where human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) are no longer needed due to advances in technology, such as the use of adult stem cells and human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs), which can be derived from adult skin or blood cells. NIH notes that since the NIH Guidelines for Stem Cell Research wereestablishedin 2009, there has been a decline in the number ofhESClinessubmittedseekingaddition to the NIH registry. NIH also noted that the agency’sforhESCshas “plateaued” in recent years, while funding forhiPSCshas increased. As such, the RFI is intended to assess the utility ofhESCsin biomedical research, including “research areas for whichhESCsare the gold standard and could not be pursued ifhESCswere unavailable,” and “areas in which additional investments should be made to bolster validated models to replace use ofhESCs.” NIH also announced that it will pause the review and approval of newhESClines to the registry, but notes thathESClines already listed on the registry may continue to be used in NIH-funded research. Comments are due April 24.
- On January 22, NIH, “Effective immediately NIH funds will no longer be used to support research involving human fetal tissue from elective abortions.” The policy builds on the first Trump Administration’s actions tosuch research through more rigorous application requirements for extramural research and aon the use of human fetal tissue in NIH intramural research. This new policy action will apply across the NIH Intramural Research Program and all NIH-supported extramural research. As with the use ofhESCs, NIH notes adeclineNIH supported human fetal tissue in research as well as advancements in alternatives, such as tissue chips or computational biology.
U.S. Moves to End WHO Membership and Funding
On January 22, HHS and the Department of Statea joint statement announcing the termination ofUSmembership in the World Health Organization (WHO) and an end to funding for and staffing of WHO initiatives. The statement cites the WHO’s “failures during the COVID-19 pandemic” as the basis for the decision and states that USengagement with the organization will be “limited solely to effectuating the withdrawal and safeguarding the health and safety of the American people.” The Trump Administrationindicatedit will continue to collaborate with other countries and selected health institutions through “direct, bilateral and results-driven partnerships” to advance global health security.
The announcement prompted questions regarding whether legal withdrawal requirements have been met, as WHO leadership hasthat under a 1948 congressional act the U.S. isobligatedto pay an outstanding balance estimated at $260.6 million for 2024 and 2025 prior to withdrawal.
Ready to talk about your organization's challenges?
Schedule a ConsultationState Policy News
Maryland
Maryland Expands Primary Care Program for Medicare, Medicaid Members. The Maryland Department of Health on January 21, 2026, that it isexpanding its advanced primary care program statewide, effective January 1, for about 1.2 million Medicare and Medicaid enrollees. The Maryland Primary Care Program (MDPCP) is a voluntary program that provides funding and support to eligible providers for the delivery of advanced primary care throughout the state, including care coordination, chronic disease management, and preventive services. The initiative expands MDPCP toroughly800,000membersthrough all managed careorganizations andadds a new Medicare value-based model in partnership with Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) to bring more practices into coordinated, quality-focused primary care.
Massachusetts
MassachusettsOutlines Plans for 1115 Demonstration Extension. Massachusetts Executive Office of Health and Human Services (EOHHS) on January 23, 2026, details on its plan to seek an extension of its Section 1115 Demonstration waiver beyond 2027, outlining initiatives it may include in a 2028–2032 request. The update covers potential authorities related to the Accountable Care Organization Program and Primary Care Sub-Capitation Program, behavioral health inpatient and diversionary services, contingency management, health-related social needs services, and the Reentry Demonstration. MassHealth will host virtual public meetings on February 9 and February 25 to review the proposals and gather public input.
Nebraska
NebraskaIssues New Draft Medicaid HCBSWaiverAmendment WithoutCaregiverService Caps, ColoradoCutsCaregiverRates. The Nebraska Examiner on January 27, 2026, that the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) released a new draft request to renew its 1915(c) Home and Community-Based Services waiver program for five years, effective July 1, 2026. After public feedback ona previousdraft amendment, DHHS no longer seeks the authority to cap the number of hours that live-in caregivers can be reimbursed for providing HCBS care. However, the amendment does still place an annual cost limit on reimbursable care. The public comment period will be open until February 26, 2026.
MeanwhiletheColorado Department of Health Care Policy and Financing (HCPF)issuedaannouncing that it will implementa 10 percent Medicaid rate cutthat will affect the Community Connector program.The cut willaffectfamilycaregivers ofchildrenwith disabilities. HCPF is following an executive order signed by Governor Jared Polis that suspends several programs to compensate for loss of revenue due to federal budget cuts. New rates are set to begin April 1, 2026.
Nevada
NevadaReleasesCO D-SNP RFP. The Nevada Health Authority on January 7, 2026, a request for proposals (RFP) for the Coordination Only Dual Eligible Special Needs Plans (CO D-SNP) Program. The state intends to award a State Medicaid Agency Contract (SMAC) to at least one qualified vendor to offer supplemental benefits not typically available under Medicare but often offered through Medicaid programs when applicable. The contractors will need to have two separate Plan Benefit Packages for full benefit dual eligibles and partial dualeligibles, andwill berequiredto offer statewide coverage across all 17 counties by January 1, 2030. The four-year contracts are expected to begin on January 1, 2027, with two one-year options for renewal. A notice of intent is estimated to be issued March 4, 2026, with the award estimated on May 12, 2026. Nevada’s current D-SNPs include Alignment Healthcare, Anthem, Centene/Silver Summit, CVS/Aetna, Hometown Health, Humana, Molina, Prominence Medicare, Select Health, and UnitedHealthcare.
Rhode Island
Rhode IslandGovernor ProposestoRemove Medicaid Coverage of GLP-1s for Weight Loss. The Rhode Island Current on January 27, 2026, that Governor Dan McKee’s proposed budget for fiscal 2027 removes GLP-1 prescription drugs from Medicaid coverage for weight loss, which would save the state approximately $6.3 million. If approved by the legislature, coverage would end October 1, 2026. The proposal still includes GLP-1 Medicaid coverage for people with diabetes.
Private Market News
Fueled By
Judge Dismisses Antitrust Class Action Against UnitedHealth, CVS, Cigna PBMs
OnJanuary 23, 2026, a federal judgea class-action lawsuit accusing UnitedHealth Group, CVS Health, and Cigna’sEvernorthHealth of colluding through their pharmacy benefit managers (PBM) to steer patients to their own pharmacies,retaindrug rebates, and force out competitors. The courtfoundthe companies’ actions, such as forming rebate-negotiating entities and communicating coverage rules, were taken years apart and were not sufficiently similar or coordinated to constitute antitrust violations. The judge alsoruledthe plaintiffs lacked standing on certain pricing claims, clearing the three PBM operators of the collusion allegations.
UnitedHealth to Rebate ACA Marketplace Profits to Members in 2026
UnitedHealth Group plans to rebate the profits it earns from its Affordable Care Act (ACA) Marketplace plans to consumers in 2026, according tofrom CEO Stephen Hemsleyfor the January 21,2026House Energy and Commerce subcommittee hearing. The company, which covers about 1 million ACA marketplace enrollees, said it will voluntarilyeliminateprofits on these plans.
MedPAC Addresses Physician Payment Update, Medicare Advantage Overpayments
During their January meeting,(MedPAC)Commissionersvoted to recommend that Medicareprovide a0.5% increase to physician reimbursement next year but retreated from itspreviousposition that annual payment updates should be linked to inflation.Physician groups said they welcomed any improvement to Medicare rates, but that doctors’ reimbursement in the federal insurance program for seniors and disabled Americans will continue to be inadequate without meaningful reform.
Medicare Advantage costs the federal government about$76 billionmore per year than traditional Medicare, totaling 114% of fee-for-service Medicare spending despite similar underlying costs. This higher spending is driven by favorableselection(11%) and increased coding intensity, or upcoding (4%); without these factors,the(MedPAC)estimates Medicare Advantage spending would be about 99% of traditional Medicare, raising concerns that taxpayers are overpaying private plans without clear added value.
Our Insights
Fueled By Experts Across Our ϲ Companies
ϲ
Webinar: 2027 ACA Considerations: Proposed NBPP and Other Key Changes and Trends
Upon the release of the CMS final 2027 Notice of Benefit and Payment Parameters and theaccompanyingLetter to Issuers in January, health plans and state policymakers will face critical decisions that shape the next phase of the individual and small group markets.Join experts from ϲ and Wakely fora timelydiscussionunpacking what the proposed rule means in practice. Speakers will focus on how the final policies may influence market stability, affordability, program administration, and longer-term planning for 2027 and beyond.
Webinar: Meeting the Healthcare Needs of Unhoused People Part 2: State Policy Responses
Recent federal policy changes, such as the 2025 Budget Reconciliation Act (OBBBA), bring significant challenges toretainingthe Medicaid coverage gains and added 1115demonstrationservices that have been so successful in the last decade. States will be under tremendous pressure to meet new requirements—but they also have options to reduce the negative impact on vulnerable populations and the healthcare providers that serve them. Joinϲ and our featured expertsfor thiswebinarto discuss state-level policy options, share resources, and consider how to move forward in the current environment.
Wakely
The Value Shift – How Medicare Advantage Benefits Are Evolving for 2026
On October 30, 2025, CMS released the 2026 MA plan benefit data. This first paper in Wakely’s 2026 MA market paper series providesan initialanalysis of the 2026 MA benefit landscape, highlighting key trends and changes for 2026.
Webinar: CY2026 Trends in Medicare Advantage Part D Plan Benefits
Join the experts from Wakely, an ϲ Company, for a data-driven discussion of the key Part D benefit trends shaping Medicare Advantage Part D plans in CY2026.As benefit design becomes more uniform across Part D plans, this webinar explores how sponsors adjusted the Part D benefits of their plans to meet the requirements of the legislation, while still remaining competitive.We will review the CY2025->CY2026 movements of Part D benefits and formulary placement, in addition to exploring benefit & formulary differences between MAPD & PDP plans for CY2026.
Leavitt Partners
Congressional Insight: Health Policy Staff Policy Learning Preferences
This insight brief summarizes findings from a Leavitt Partners survey asking Congressional health policy staff about their communications and research preferences when learning about a new health policy issue. Understanding how to be effective in communicating with Congressional health policy staff is valuable knowledge for stakeholders whoseekto inform and engage Congress on health.
Advancing Digital Quality Reporting Using Regulated Endpoints
This brief explains how health care organizations can modernize quality reporting by using standardized, real‑time data connections that many systems already have in place. Leavitt Partners, an ϲ company,facilitateddiscussions with the Digital Quality Implementers Community, NCQA, and several health systems to conduct a feasibility study. The findings suggest thatnearly halfof today’s…
Webinar Alert
Meeting the Healthcare Needs of Unhoused People Part 2: State Policy Responses
Register HereRFP Calendar
RFP Calendar
| Date | State/Program | Event | Beneficiaries |
|---|---|---|---|
| Date: DELAYED | State/Program: Texas STAR & CHIP | Event: Implementation | Beneficiaries: 4,600,000 |
| Date: December 2025 - February 2026 | State/Program: Texas STAR Kids | Event: Awards | Beneficiaries: 150,000 |
| Date: February 2026 | State/Program: Illinois | Event: Awards | Beneficiaries: 2,400,000 |
| Date: February 17, 2026 | State/Program: Nevada CO D-SNP | Event: Proposals Due | Beneficiaries: 88,000 |
| Date: February 19, 2026 | State/Program: Nevada Children's Specialty | Event: Awards | Beneficiaries: NA |
| Date: May 12, 2026 | State/Program: Nevada CO D-SNP | Event: Awards | Beneficiaries: 88,000 |
| Date: June 24, 2026 | State/Program: Wisconsin LTC GSR 3 | Event: Awards | Beneficiaries: 56,000 (all GSR) |
| Date: December 2026 - February 2027 | State/Program: Texas STAR Kids | Event: Implementation | Beneficiaries: 150,000 |
| Date: January 1, 2027 | State/Program: Illinois | Event: Implementation | Beneficiaries: 2,400,000 |
| Date: January 1, 2027 | State/Program: Nevada Children's Specialty | Event: Implementation | Beneficiaries: NA |
| Date: January 1, 2027 | State/Program: Nevada CO D-SNP | Event: Implementation | Beneficiaries: 88,000 |
| Date: January 1, 2027 | State/Program: Wisconsin LTC GSR 3 | Event: Implementation | Beneficiaries: 56,000 (all GSR) |
| Date: January 1, 2027 | State/Program: Illinois Tailored Care Management Program | Event: Implementation | Beneficiaries: 22,400 |
| Date: January 1, 2028 | State/Program: Wisconsin LTC GSR 4,6 | Event: Implementation | Beneficiaries: 56,000 (all GSR) |
| Date: Fall 2027 | State/Program: Oregon | Event: RFP Release | Beneficiaries: 1,200,000 |
| Date: 2028 | State/Program: North Carolina | Event: RFP Release | Beneficiaries: 2,200,000 |