The CMS ACCESS Model Is Redefining Chronic Care - Here's What It Means for Forward-Looking Organizations
- Bryan Saba
- Dec 2, 2025
- 4 min read
On December 1, 2025, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) announced the ACCESS Model - a 10-year initiative that brings technology-enabled chronic care management into Medicare reimbursement and ties payment to actual outcomes, not activity volume. Applications open January 12, 2026, with the model launching July 1, 2026.
For decades, chronic care has operated within the constraints of visit-based billing. ACCESS changes that dynamic. It empowers organizations to deliver proactive, continuous support for the chronic conditions that drive most Medicare spending - and rewards them for helping patients stay healthier over time.
This represents a structural shift in how chronic care will be delivered and financed in the United States.
What ACCESS Covers: Four Clinical Tracks
ACCESS focuses on conditions affecting more than two-thirds of Medicare beneficiaries. CMS has organized the model into four clinical tracks, each grouping related conditions that share similar care approaches:
Early Cardio-Kidney-Metabolic (eCKM): hypertension, dyslipidemia, obesity or overweight with central obesity markers, and prediabetes
Cardio-Kidney-Metabolic (CKM): diabetes, chronic kidney disease (stages 3a/3b), and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease
Musculoskeletal (MSK): chronic musculoskeletal pain
Behavioral Health (BH): depression and anxiety
Each track includes condition-specific outcome measures and targets informed by clinical guidelines — including biomarkers like blood pressure, HbA1c, lipids, and weight, as well as validated Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) for pain, mood, and function.
What ACCESS Offers
ACCESS creates meaningful opportunities for organizations that support older adults and high-risk patients:
Flexibility to innovate. Participants design their own care pathways - using digital tools, virtual care, remote monitoring, or hybrid approaches - as long as outcomes improve.
Predictable, recurring payments. Monthly payments arrive in fixed installments, with full reimbursement tied to measurable clinical progress.
Reduced patient barriers. CMS will waive patient co-payments for ACCESS services, removing a common obstacle to enrollment and engagement.
Referral incentives. Primary care providers and referring clinicians can receive up to $100 per year per patient for co-management activities, encouraging collaboration between ACCESS organizations and traditional providers.
A public directory. CMS will maintain a public ACCESS Tools Directory listing participating providers and approved technology solutions, helping patients and clinicians make informed choices.
For providers, senior-living communities, home-health agencies, and technology-forward care innovators, ACCESS provides a long-term, Medicare-supported business model for tech-enabled chronic care.
Designing Your ACCESS-Aligned Chronic Care Strategy
ACCESS isn't about a single tool or device - it's about building an integrated solution stack capable of delivering measurable improvement. As you prepare your strategy, four capabilities matter most:
Continuous visibility into patient health. Success requires a unified view of biometric data, sensor activity, symptom reports, behavioral trends, and care-plan changes - not fragmented snapshots from disconnected systems.
Personalized engagement that drives action. Daily touchpoints must be intelligent, timely, and connected to what's happening in a patient's life. Generic reminders won't move the needle on blood pressure or medication adherence.
Scalable care coordination. Your team must manage more patients with greater precision, without proportional staffing increases. Automation and intelligent triage will be essential.
Effortless, auditable outcome measurement. ACCESS reimbursement depends on demonstrating improvement against CMS-defined targets. Reporting needs to be automatic, accurate, and tied to a continuous stream of patient data.
These capabilities define what "ACCESS readiness" really looks like.
How reCare.ai Supports ACCESS-Ready Care Delivery
Building these capabilities from scratch is a significant undertaking. At reCare.ai, we've designed our platform specifically to help care organizations meet the demands of outcome-based models like ACCESS.
Important note: reCare.ai is a technology and care-support platform, not a direct ACCESS Model applicant. Only organizations and clinicians enrolled in Medicare Part B may apply to participate in ACCESS. We serve as an enabling partner for eligible providers who need the infrastructure to deliver continuous, outcome-focused care.
Here's how our platform addresses each of the four core capabilities:
Continuous visibility through unified patient timelines. reCare.ai integrates EHR records, sensors, wearables, emergency events, and conversational data into a single longitudinal view of each patient, enabling earlier detection, fewer preventable episodes, and more stable chronic-condition control.
Intelligent, context-aware patient engagement. Our system uses each patient's full history and recent behaviors to drive relevant check-ins, reminders, and coaching at the right moments, supporting higher adherence, improved self-management, and more consistent daily behaviors.
Scalable hybrid-care coordination. reCare.ai translates real-time data into actionable priorities, helping care teams intervene where they can deliver the most impact, enabling larger patient panels managed effectively without overwhelming staff.
Automatic, ACCESS-ready outcome reporting. We convert continuous monitoring and engagement data into clean, auditable outcome trends aligned with CMS expectations, streamlining reimbursement and providing clear demonstration of program effectiveness.
Preparing for July 2026: Your Next Steps
ACCESS represents a rare alignment of policy, payment incentives, and technology capability. Organizations that invest early will shape the next decade of chronic-care delivery, and benefit from a stable, scalable payment model rooted in patient outcomes.
With applications opening January 12, 2026, now is the time to assess your readiness.
Consider these steps:
Review your EHR integration capabilities. Can you create unified patient views that incorporate external data sources?
Audit your current biometric data capture. Are you collecting the measures CMS will use to evaluate outcomes?
Evaluate your patient engagement tools. Do they support the continuous, personalized touchpoints ACCESS rewards?
Assess your reporting infrastructure. Can you automatically generate the outcome documentation CMS requires?
Identify your technology partners. Which platforms can fill gaps in your current capabilities?
reCare.ai is built to support organizations through this transition - ingesting the data, building the timeline, surfacing insights, coordinating care, and proving the outcomes that ACCESS rewards.
If you'd like help developing an ACCESS readiness assessment or exploring how reCare.ai can support your care model, contact our team.

