Evidence-based prevention
Connect preventive services and health promotion to defined populations, delivery pathways, incentives, and measurable outcomes.
Market perspective / United States
Professional perspectives for U.S. health organizations working across population health, accountable care, prevention, accessibility, data modernization, and service transformation.
Strategic context
U.S. health-system priorities increasingly connect evidence-based prevention, person-centered care, accountability for quality and outcomes, improved access, and data that is usable for action.
The advisory opportunity is practical: align these priorities within the organization’s applicable regulatory, payment, delivery, workforce, and technology context.
Areas of contribution
Connect preventive services and health promotion to defined populations, delivery pathways, incentives, and measurable outcomes.
Align care coordination, quality, total-cost considerations, patient experience, and whole-person needs within an operating model.
Identify unequal friction across information, eligibility, navigation, digital services, care delivery, follow-up, and outcomes.
Translate modernization priorities into decision rights, data use cases, workflow integration, quality, interoperability, and adoption.
Design cross-functional journeys spanning clinical, operational, digital, data, partner, and community capabilities.
Use staged roadmaps, logic models, leading indicators, outcome measures, and stop-or-scale decisions to manage uncertainty.
A decision-maker agenda
U.S. health organizations