Imagine for a moment a healthcare system where quality trumps quantity—where your relationship with your entire care team is the cornerstone of your well-being.

This isn’t a far-off dream. It’s the promise of value-based care, a revolutionary approach with the potential to reshape the landscape of American healthcare. As we stand at the crossroads of tradition and innovation, let’s explore how this shift is not just changing payment models, but fundamentally altering the way we think about health and healing.

Exploring the Shift to Value-Based Care

When I started my professional career in the early 2000s as a research analyst on the Patient Relations team in a large 800-bed academic medical center, I had an extraordinary, eye-opening experience. The classroom setting in my undergraduate health administration program had prepared me for the basics, but it barely scratched the surface when it came to the complexities of one of the most critical systems in the United States—the healthcare system.

The campus operated like a small town, with the number of employees nearly equal to the full-time residents of the surrounding college town. Clinicians, staff, researchers, and volunteers would drive in from rural communities to support and seek care at this sprawling, dynamic center that provided vital health services to thousands of people in need. Staff humorously dubbed the busy main corridor connecting the children’s, women’s, and main hospital “I-40,” after the nearby interstate.

In my early days, I connected classroom knowledge to real-world applications. I heard terms like allowable charge and relative value units from the finance team while clinicians talked about quality of care, patient safety, and clinical protocols. While my education felt relevant, I found myself confused by the swirl of terminology bandied about. One term that I soon learned was a key driver of how healthcare functioned at the time was fee-for-service.

In this traditional model, insurance companies pay healthcare providers for each individual service they provide. For instance, an office consultation is reimbursed separately from each test, procedure, or follow-up care associated with the visit. The relationship between payers, providers, and patients is set up to be transactional. In this system, the focus is on the volume of services delivered, rather than the value those services bring to a patient’s health

However, the landscape of healthcare is evolving. In recent years, value-based care has gained momentum as a payment model. This model shifts the focus from quantity to quality, emphasizing better patient outcomes and lower overall costs. Value-based care reimburses healthcare systems for the results achieved, not for the number of services provided. It’s a fundamental shift that requires more than just procedural changes—it demands a change in how we build and sustain relationships with patients, families, and other key stakeholders.

In a fee-for-service model, interactions with patients could be limited and transactional, as providers were tasked with focusing on delivering services within short windows of time. But value-based care relies on fostering deeper, more continuous connections with patients. It’s no longer enough to see a patient, treat a condition, and move on. Healthcare providers must engage with patients over time, focus on preventative care, and ensure health outcomes are sustainable. This requires a strong patient-provider relationship built on trust, communication, and shared decision-making.

The future of healthcare will depend on the strength of these relationships. Patients need to feel a sense of ownership and agency to actively participate in their care. And providers must understand the full context of a patient’s health—both inside and outside the clinic setting. Strong patient-provider relationships lead to better adherence to care plans, improved health outcomes, and a more collaborative approach to healthcare delivery. In a value-based care model, these relationships are essential, dare I even say non-negotiable, for success.

Healthcare is a complex ecosystem of individuals, organizations, and regulatory bodies working together to provide essential care. A deeper understanding of this system by all stakeholders—both inside, next to, and outside of healthcare—can lead to more informed questions, more effective collaborations, and better-designed solutions. As we continue this shift toward value-based care, fostering stronger relationships between patients and providers will be critical to improving outcomes and ensuring the long-term health of our communities.

So how can healthcare leaders and community organizations work together to best develop these strong relationships? At Next Stage, we believe the answer lies in radical, authentic cross-sector collaboration.

Launching Impact for Health

Next Stage believes trusted community assets serve as essential mediating structures and are uniquely positioned to support the collective drive for all people to have the resources they need to thrive.

We feel so strongly in this concept that we recently launched a new service line, Impact for Health, to support innovative health initiatives and community health collaborations. Our approach begins with community voice, shifting organizations and cross-sector collaborations from a top-down approach to an inside-out process. This methodology centers the perspectives of the people receiving care, which fosters increased trust and a sense of belonging.

But Impact for Health is more than just a concept: it’s a movement. Next Stage is partnering with innovation-minded organizations to address the deep-seated disparities in health across socioeconomic demographics. Rather than perpetuate broken systems, our partnerships aim to disrupt the status quo that allows health to be seen as a privilege instead of a human right.

As part of our Impact for Health service line launch, we’re hosting a series of five free webinars designed to broaden understanding of the healthcare system and its evolving dynamics.

Demystifying the Complex U.S. Health System

Do you work in community or population health, social work, care management, health education, or a clinical health setting? If so, we invite you to register today for the first webinar in our free series: Demystifying the Complex U.S. Health System. We’ll dive deeper into the transition to value-based care and highlight real-world examples of innovative partnerships and programs transforming health outcomes.

You’ll also be able to engage with peers and industry experts committed to advancing health equity and care quality. Join us to share your experiences and build networks to help your organization design innovative, community-driven health solutions.

Register for free today! We look forward to seeing you there.

Nimisha Patel joined Next Stage in 2024. Previously, she led The New Guard, a consultancy working with clients in health care, hospitality, real estate, nonprofits, and technology. She also served as National Director of Innovation & Design for Health Leads, a national leader in addressing the systemic causes of racial health inequalities, and as Associate Vice President at Duke Health, where she led innovation design and implementation.