The Next Chapter in Healthcare Reform Starts With Employers
Back in 2015, I had the opportunity to work on my first Accountable Care Organization (ACO) model with CMS. It was an exciting time filled with energy, collaboration, and the hope that we could finally bend the cost curve and make care more affordable for everyone. Although the ACO was considered a success, it did little to change the true cost of care to consumers.
Today, that message feels more urgent than ever. Healthcare premiums continue to climb. Family coverage through employers now averages nearly $27,000 per year, a 6% increase from 2024. Employers expect costs to rise another 6.5% or more in 2026, and much of that increase will be passed along to employees through higher premiums, deductibles, and out-of-pocket expenses. With costs shifting more heavily to consumers, it’s no longer optional for patients to think like buyers, it’s essential.
We keep trying to lower healthcare costs by pressuring hospitals, insurers, and pharmaceutical companies. Yet after decades of attempts, costs continue to rise. The most powerful lever isn’t going to come from healthcare delivery, it’s going to be someone with real incentive to change, and that’s employers.
Employers Hold the Untapped Power
Employers account for nearly half of all healthcare spending in the United States. Yet for too long, healthcare strategy has been treated as a benefits issue rather than a business one. It sits within HR departments, disconnected from finance, supply chain, or operations, functions where cost control and performance management are part of the daily language.
Forward-thinking companies are starting to change this. They are recognizing that healthcare is a trillion-dollar business expense and should be managed with the same discipline as any other major investment.
That means analyzing healthcare data, benchmarking costs, and negotiating based on value and performance, not just access. It means bringing finance and operations leaders into benefit design, creating dashboards, measuring ROI, and asking the same questions they ask of any other vendor: Are we getting what we pay for? Are our dollars driving measurable outcomes?
When companies start to apply that level of rigor, they begin to see results. Walmart and Disney have both experimented with direct contracting models, partnering with high-performing health systems to negotiate bundled pricing for specific procedures. Other large employers are forming regional coalitions to negotiate as a group, using data, scale, and shared accountability to demand better pricing and transparency.
Imagine if every Fortune 500 company treated healthcare the same way they manage supplier contracts, negotiating based on cost, quality, and service levels. The industry would have no choice but to evolve. Hospitals and payors would need to compete for employer business, innovate faster, and deliver measurable value.
The Bottom Line
Healthcare reform will not be led by hospitals, insurers, or policymakers alone. It will be driven by employers who decide to treat healthcare as a strategic investment rather than a sunk cost.
If large employers begin to measure, negotiate, and design benefits based on value, performance, and prevention, the market will follow. Costs will fall, transparency will rise, and innovation will accelerate.
We’ve built endless programs to reform healthcare from the top down. Maybe it’s time to rebuild it from the inside out, starting with the organizations that pay for most of it.






