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Joshua M. Liao, MD, offers advice for practices trying to keep patients engaged and connected in a fragmented care environment.
In an interview with Medical Economics following the ACP Internal Medicine Meeting 2025, Joshua M. Liao, MD, professor of medicine and public health with tenure, Walter Family Distinguished Chair in internal medicine, director and principal scholar, program on policy evaluation and learning at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, offers practical advice for practices trying to keep patients engaged and connected in fragmented care environments.
Speaking about Medicare value-based models, Liao emphasized the importance of upfront communication and patient choice. âWe can let the visit counts and everything sort itself out⊠or, better yet, prospectively before anything happens, why donât we just acknowledge, hey, youâre my patient, right, and Iâm your doctor, right?â he said. âYou can go on the Medicare website⊠and you can actually, like, pick Dr. Liao as my doctor.â
That strategy â known as voluntary alignment â helps settle attribution early, minimizing ambiguity about who is responsible for managing a patientâs care.
He also encouraged physicians to be more intentional about referral networks. âIf Iâm a primary care doctor and I send you out for specialty care⊠and they never call me, send me a note, thatâs where that problem about data becomes hard,â Liao said. âBut if I know this clinician⊠is also going to send me a letter or call meââHey, Dr. Liao, I saw [your patient]⊠Iâm going to pass the baton back to youâ â thatâs very helpful.â
Together, voluntary alignment and closed-loop referrals can help physicians maintain strong patient relationships and continuity of care, even across fragmented systems.