What Is Accountable Care Organization (ACO)? - TechTarget
Maybe your like
- Home
- Heathcare policy and regulation
By - Tayla Holman, Site Editor
An accountable care organization (ACO) is an association of hospitals, healthcare providers and insurers in which all parties voluntarily assume financial and medical responsibility for Medicare patients. The purpose of an ACO is to enable care coordination that allows a patient to receive the right care at the right time while reducing the risk of medical errors and duplicate services.
ACOs are part of the broader concept of population health management, which seeks to improve patient engagement and clinical proficiency while reducing costs. While ACOs don't entirely move away from a fee-for-service payment model, the focus shifts to creating savings incentives by offering providers bonuses for keeping healthcare costs down and meeting quality benchmarks. Conversely, healthcare providers who participate in an ACO and fail to meet the standards for cost control and patient care receive lower payments from Medicare.
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) measure quality of care using 33 metrics in four categories: patient or caregiver experience, care coordination or patient safety, preventive health and at-risk population. Some of the metrics include how well providers communicate, screening for future fall risk and shared decision making.
The creation of ACOs
Elliott Fisher, M.D., director of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice in Hanover, N.H., was one of the originators of the term "accountable care organization" in 2006. Fisher and his colleagues conducted research on the ACO concept and worked with members of Congress to include ACOs in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. President Barack Obama signed the act, more commonly known as the ACA, on March 23, 2010. The ACA called for CMS to administer an ACO program by January 1, 2012.
Healthcare providers who participate in an ACO can still receive fee-for-service Medicare payments, and the providers are eligible for bonuses if they meet specified quality and savings requirements through the ACO. A provider can also participate in a Medicare ACO and a commercial ACO (from a private payer) at the same time, but a commercial ACO typically sets its own quality measures.
How ACOs affect patients
If patients see healthcare providers that are part of an ACO, they benefit from coordinated care that allows each member of their healthcare team to communicate with each other. If, for example, a primary care provider and specialist prescribe the same medication, they are alerted to the duplication.
Similarly, if a provider and specialist prescribe conflicting medications, they are alerted immediately to prevent any harm. Patients also spend less time filling out medical paperwork because all the healthcare providers have access to electronic health records.
In this video from UCLA Health, learn how ACOs benefit patient careAll of a patient's appointments and tests are completed under the same healthcare umbrella, provided by members of that particular ACO. If a primary care physician treats a patient and needs additional insight from a specialist, the physician refers the patient to a specialist within the ACO, which keeps costs down. If patients seek additional care outside of the ACO, they have to pay more.
Fee-for-service Medicare patients who see a healthcare provider who is participating in a Medicare ACO maintain their Medicare rights.
How ACOs affect hospitals
Research suggests that hospitals that participate in an ACO do not necessarily see improvements in all Medicare value-based purchasing programs. Hospitals that participated in an ACO performed better than non-ACO hospitals in CMS' Hospital Value-Based Purchasing (HBVP) program, but not in the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program (HRRP) or Hospital Acquired Conditions (HAC) Reduction program, according to the American Journal of Managed Care.
Under the HBVP program, CMS provides incentive payments to hospitals based on how closely the hospital follows best clinical practices and how well it enhances a patient's experience during a hospital stay. Quality payments are provided based on how well the hospital performs on a measure compared to the national average (achievement) or by how much the hospital improves on a measure compared to its baseline (improvement).
In the HRRP, hospitals receive a financial incentive based on their ability to reduce preventable readmissions. The HRRP specifies certain conditions for which readmissions should be reduced, such heart attack and heart failure, pneumonia and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Under the HAC program, a hospital receives a penalty if it performs poorly in regard to conditions that are acquired in the hospital, such as an infection. The goal of this program is to improve the safety of inpatients.
Differences between ACOs and HMOs
Although ACOs and health maintenance organizations (HMOs) share some similarities, such as managing risk and controlling costs by promoting the health of its members, there are a few key differences. Patients who have an HMO plan can only choose a physician from a list of approved providers. In an ACO, however, patients may see any physician. A patient can also decline to have protected health information shared within the ACO.
Unlike an HMO, an ACO is not an insurance company. HMOs are insurance programs that provide healthcare to a defined patient population for a fixed price. An ACO cannot change a patient's Medicare benefits.
Benefits of ACOs
So far, one of the major benefits of ACOs is their ability to reduce healthcare spending. As of 2017, ACOs that participated in CMS' Medicare Shared Savings program reduced spending by about $1 billion in three years, according to the Office of the Inspector General.
ACOs also slightly outperformed fee-for-service providers and improved the quality of care provided to patients (82% vs. 81%) based on the quality measures set by CMS.
Drawbacks of ACOs
One of the drawbacks of an ACO is that there may be differences of opinions when it comes to decision making and how to split a patient's bill. This can lead providers to feel like they no longer have autonomy over how they care for their patients. There may also be restrictions as far as how referrals can be made.
Funding and cost distribution
ACOs can choose how to divide any savings, and there may be some differences in distribution from one ACO to another. One way savings may be distributed is based on merit-based contribution.
Other ACOs use fixed allocation that distributes savings similar to fee-for-service payment rations. This model does not consider who in the ACO generated the savings.
Continue Reading About accountable care organization (ACO)
- The future of ACOs
- How tech is tied to value-based care and ACOs
- A care coordination app that helps accountable care
Related Terms
What is Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS)? The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. See complete definition What is HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act)? HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) is United States legislation that provides national standards to ... See complete definition What is HL7 (Health Level Seven International)? HL7 (Health Level Seven International) is an accredited, not-for-profit organization that develops frameworks and standards used ... See complete definitionDig Deeper on Heathcare policy and regulation
-
Understanding the Fundamentals of Accountable Care Organizations
By: Jacqueline LaPointe -
As Medicare ACOs grow, key model improvements emerge
By: Jacqueline LaPointe -
MSSP accountable care organizations share key priorities and challenges
By: Victoria Bailey -
ACO Enrollment Doesn’t Help Mental Healthcare Access, PROs
By: Sara Heath
- Implementing interventional analytics at a Medicare ACO –Real Time Medical Systems
- Improving LTPAC Management Interventions Using Real-Time Analytics –Real Time Medical Systems
- See More
- A Look Inside the Top Four Value-Based Care Plans –XtelligentMedia Healthcare
- Hospitals get $2.9B increase in Medicare inpatient pay –XtelligentMedia Healthcare
- Rev Cycle Management
- Patient Engagement
- Healthtech Analytics
- Healthtech Security
- Virtual Healthcare
- CMS announces new ACO model as REACH ends
CMS unveiled the Long-Term Enhanced ACO Design, or LEAD, Model, that will run for ten years following the end of the popular ACO ...
- C-suite expects value-based care participation to heat up
Hospital and health system executives are investing more in value-based care models, including ACOs and bundled payments, ...
- More primary care practices ditch insurance for direct care
A study reveals an increasing number of practices and clinicians transitioning to concierge and direct primary care models in a ...
- 1 in 4 patients delay care, cite healthcare affordability issues
A new study takes a longitudinal look at healthcare affordability problems, finding the issue is more pervasive than previously ...
- What patients want to know about AI ambient scribing
UC Davis Health found patients want to know when AI ambient scribing is being used, that the tool is secure and that their ...
- How docs can manage patients consulting AI medical advice
Researchers recommend providers lead with empathy when patients bring in AI-generated medical advice and then move into shared ...
- HHS seeks info to guide AI regulation, reimbursement
HHS is seeking feedback from stakeholders on regulations, reimbursement models and research initiatives that will accelerate AI ...
- New framework aims to drive ethical AI use in mental health
Spring Health has introduced an ethical AI framework for mental health amid an FDA committee review of generative AI digital ...
- HHS outlines strategy to expand AI adoption
Although the strategy is internally focused, HHS said it will collaborate with the private sector and identify “priority” ...
- 10 largest healthcare data breaches reported to OCR in 2025
More than 20 million individuals were affected by the 10 largest healthcare data breaches reported to OCR in 2025.
- Governance gaps threaten progress as healthcare AI adoption grows
Health systems are relying on AI faster than their governance structures can evolve, expanding the potential for data privacy ...
- OCR settles 54th HIPAA right of access case
Occupational health services provider Concentra will pay OCR $112,500 to resolve alleged HIPAA right of access failures.
- Physicians' telehealth use varies across specialties, practice type
New AMA data reveals that telehealth utilization among physicians has only dropped slightly since 2022; however, factors such as ...
- Exploring Nemours' pediatric at-home care program
Nemours Children's Health launched an at-home care program leveraging telehealth and RPM that aims to enhance patient recovery ...
- Most nurses say that virtual nursing does not reduce workloads
Not only did most nurses report that virtual nursing did not alleviate their workloads, but about 10% also believe that it ...
Tag » What Does Aco Stand For
-
Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) - CMS
-
ACO - What Does ACO Stand For? The Free Dictionary
-
What Does ACO Stand For?
-
ACO - Definition By AcronymFinder
-
Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs): General Information
-
Definition Of Accountable Care Organization (ACO) - Gartner
-
ACO Meanings | What Does ACO Stand For? - All Acronyms
-
How Does An ACO Work? What Is An ACO? See What ACO ... - Alleva
-
What Does ACO Mean? - ACO Definitions | Abbreviation Finder
-
What Are Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs)? - WebMD
-
What Does ACO Stand For?
-
What Does ACO Stand For? - ACO Meaning - Acronyms And Slang
-
CIN And ACO: What Is The Difference? - Tangible Solutions
-
Administrative Contracting Officer (ACO)