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  1. Accountable Care Organizations | AAFP

    Learn about accountable care organizations and how they empower family physicians to manage quality care for patients.

  2. ACOs: What to Know | AAFP

    An ACO can be almost any combination of group practices, networks of practices, hospitals, hospitals employing other physicians and clinicians, hospital-physician joint ventures, or virtual groups.

  3. Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) | AAFP

    Jun 13, 2025 · The AAFP supports the ACO model, and promotes benchmarks, information systems, and payment regulations that protect both patients and family physicians.

  4. A decade of value-based care: How ACO models succeed

    Value-based care can improve health outcomes by prioritizing quality over quantity, reducing waste and enhancing preventive care.

  5. What Family Physicians Need to Know About ACOs | AAFP

    Accountable care organizations could be the next big thing in health care delivery. Here's what you need to know – and what you need to do – now.

  6. Patient Attribution: Why It Matters More Than Ever - AAFP

    If you are participating in an Advanced APM such as a Medicare ACO or a patient-centered medical home, your Medicare patients will be attributed to you based on the attribution method used by the …

  7. CMMI Models for Primary Care | AAFP

    Learn more about the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation and how to participate in alternative payment models designed to support primary care.

  8. And from the Brookings-Dartmouth web site: “The ACO approach also builds on current reform efforts that focus on one key group of providers, as in the medical-home model, or on a discrete ...

  9. • Patient assigned to ACO if he or she received at least one primary care service from ACO-affiliated specialist physician and a plurality of primary care from ACO-affiliated specialist physicians.

  10. Navigating the Transition to Value-Based Payment: Options for ... - AAFP

    An ACO is a group of doctors, hospitals, or other providers that contracts with a payer to improve health outcomes and reduce costs for a defined population (often a minimum of 5,000 patients) and ...