Senior woman teleconsulting from home. (Photo by: BSIP/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
Universal Images Group via Getty Images
Concierge medicine is experiencing rapid growth, yet it remains largely accessible only to those who can afford to pay for it out of pocket. Both patients and clinicians highlight that the essential aspects of concierge care—time, access, and continuity—should not be considered luxuries. These are the missing elements in primary care.
The new APCM codes from CMS introduce financial incentives to make these benefits available on a larger scale for both clinicians and the broader primary care community.
Understanding Concierge Medicine
Concierge medicine, alongside direct primary care, operates on a membership basis where patients pay a subscription for enhanced access. This includes benefits like same-day appointments, longer consultations, and direct communication with their healthcare team. Physicians, in return, manage smaller patient groups, offering more personalized and relationship-focused care.
Clinicians’ Move Towards Concierge Models
Clinicians face significant challenges in terms of capacity. With an aging population and increasingly complex patient needs, demand for care is rising while the clinician workforce struggles to keep up. This scenario often leads to burnout and moral distress among primary care physicians tasked with handling thousands of patients while maintaining quality care.
Membership models provide a sustainable alternative. By reducing patient loads, allowing for longer visits, and easing documentation tasks, these models offer a viable way to practice medicine. This, coupled with high consumer demand, explains the swift expansion of concierge care.
The Appeal of Concierge-Like Care for Patients
Patients are attracted to concierge care because it addresses significant shortcomings in modern primary care, such as limited clinician time and fragmented relationships. This model ensures same-day access and longer visits, enabling clinicians to listen and address issues more effectively. It also facilitates direct communication with the care team and improved coordination after hospital or specialist visits. These features help alleviate patient anxiety, enhance chronic disease management, and create a seamless experience. These are fundamental elements of high-quality primary care. Broadening access to these services could transition care from reactive crisis management to proactive prevention, improving outcomes, especially for older and more complex patients.
APCM: Its Role and Importance
Advanced Primary Care Management (APCM) is Medicare’s initiative to address gaps in care on a large scale. Set to launch in January 2025 with codes HCPCS G0556–G0558, APCM provides practices with a per-patient, per-month fee for a range of services. These include 24/7 access, patient-centered care plans, care-transition management, enhanced asynchronous communication, population-level management, and quality reporting. The codes are tiered based on complexity, offering higher payments for patients with multiple chronic conditions and low-income seniors. Notably, APCM eliminates the cumbersome time-tracking requirements of previous care-management codes, providing predictable, subscription-like revenue without needing patients to pay a retainer.
The Potential of APCM as a Primary Care Model
APCM is significant because it aligns incentives with what both clinicians and patients value: continuity, proactive care, and reliable access. It offers predictable revenue, reduces administrative burdens, and promotes a concierge-style patient experience, compensating clinicians and health systems for the effort involved in providing it. The codes’ structure, with monthly, tiered payments that increase with patient complexity and pay more for low-income, high-need individuals, acknowledges the need for greater coordination, staffing, and technology investments for comprehensive care.
However, policy alone will not ensure APCM’s widespread adoption. Historically, new care-management codes have been underutilized due to documentation challenges, staffing issues, and the complexity of implementing new programs.
To effectively implement APCM, healthcare systems need capabilities they weren’t originally designed to provide, such as continuous patient engagement, 24/7 access, and coordination across care settings. Building these capabilities internally is often slow and costly.
The most feasible solution is partnership. Health systems and physician groups should collaborate with technology-enabled care delivery organizations that already have the necessary infrastructure and care teams for remote monitoring, asynchronous communication, and population health management. These partnerships can extend clinician capacity, shorten implementation timeframes, and enable the delivery of concierge-level services to larger and more diverse patient populations.
In this framework, APCM provides the financial foundation, while technology-enabled partners deliver the operational support required to fulfill its potential at scale.
When thoughtfully implemented, APCM could redefine primary care by making the core benefits of concierge medicine widely accessible, ensuring that better care reaches more individuals.

