Payers are challenged every year to balance financial sustainability with the need for quality, member-centric care. Addressing these concerns in 2026 will require both drug and medical management teams and care management teams to focus on harnessing data and transforming it into actionable insights.
Payer data strategies were the main topic of conversation in “Thriving in 2026 with Data, Evidence-Based Practices, and Affordable Member-Centered Care,” a webinar cosponsored by Wolters Kluwer Health and Fierce Healthcare. It featured Dr. Laurel Soot, Chief Medical Officer for Providence Health Plan; Mitch Collier, Associate Director of Technology Product Management focused on care management at Wolters Kluwer; and Deborah Pasko, PharmD, Associate Director of Technology Product Management focused on payer/PBM drug management at Wolters Kluwer. The three panelists shared their expertise on the challenges facing payers and how data utilization and evidence-based practices are essential to payer success.
Payers are contending with systemic challenges to member wellness
The expert panelists all agreed that payers are facing unprecedented threats to member wellness that challenge their benefit design and outreach strategies. These include:
- Lack of affordability of healthcare
- Health risks amplified by post-COVID conditions and barriers to access
- Rising drug costs, particularly of specialty drugs
- Healthcare system fragmentation, making it more difficult to address any of the above
Affordability is on the minds of employers, patients, and healthcare providers and facilities, Soot noted. To address all these concerns, payers need to consider “how do you provide appropriate medical care that is evidence-based and still try to control the cost of care?”
To overcome these hurdles, “blunt cost-control measures” will not be effective, she said. “We really have to start looking at the fragmentation of the system and addressing healthcare costs differently than we have in the past.”
From a care management and member engagement perspective, Collier pointed out that, post-COVID, payers are encountering many members having more serious health issues than prior to the pandemic, particularly those that live in rural areas or have barriers to easily accessing their providers. Payers are looking to find solutions to intervene more proactively – to prevent rising-risk members from developing more serious conditions and to increase affordable access to care, he said.
He also stressed that care management teams are forced “to compete for member attention” with all the health information swirling on the Internet, social media, podcasts, and even in the news. “How do you rise above and provide information that really resonates with members and helps them in making [informed] decisions about their health?”
Pasko discussed the increasing number of treatments falling into the specialty drug category, some of which escalate member costs into thousands or even millions of dollars.
Health plans need “good, evidence-based content to assist with those prior authorizations to help payers really manage the administrative burden that's associated with [specialty drugs] while still expediting the drug and getting [it] to the patient.”