Leading Transformation for Value‑Based Health Care
A strategic program for executives, innovators, and investors
About the Program
The Leading Transformation for Value-Based Health Care course brings together inter-professional leaders and executives from across medical, nursing, investor, and managerial disciplines and sectors.
Participants will learn how to effectively improve quality of care, enhance provider performance/patient experience, and reduce costs in their organizations. Hearing from industry and policy leaders and meeting fellow innovators and executives from across disciplines, participants will gain insight into diverse perspectives on transitional challenges and opportunities, learn about the latest systems to manage value-based care processes and evaluation, and gain leadership skills to effect transformative change. Participants will have opportunities to put their new learning into practice with a capstone project. At the end of the course, participants will receive a certificate of completion from the University.
Who Should Attend
- Health system and health plan executives
- Health care providers
- Founders and leaders of startups in health care delivery, technology, and analytics
- Venture capital and private equity investors new to value-based care
- Policymakers and senior advisors shaping the future of health care
What You’ll Learn
- How leading organizations are succeeding in value-based care
- How to assess risk, contract effectively, and build models that drive results
- How data, equity, and quality intersect to create sustainable transformation
- What investors need to know to evaluate and support VBC businesses
- How policy, regulation, and payment reform are shaping the market
Investment
The tuition amount for the next offering is to be announced.
Tuition assistance may be available, for more information email LTVHprogram@jh.edu.
Tuition Remission
Full-time, benefits-eligible members of the JHU faculty or staff are eligible to receive tuition assistance. Visit the Non-credit Courses at JHU page of the Human Resources website to learn more about the policy. To apply for tuition remission, complete the Non-Credit Tuition Remission Application and e-mail it to LTVHprogram@jh.edu.
For more information about the program or to inquire about tuition assistance, email LTVHprogram@jh.edu.
2026 Program of Study
Next Offering Dates: To be announced
Foundations and History of Value-Based Care (in person)
- U.S. Health System Overview: Key Drivers of Cost, Quality, and Equity, and Value-Based Care as an Answer to US Health System Challenges
- History of VBC: Trace the roots and purpose of VBC and its evolution from a nascent concept to a more sophisticated and far-reaching approach to driving health system transformation
- VBC Defined: From Quality Reporting to Shared Savings to Global Capitation and how it has evolved over time
- Payment Models 101: Accountable Care, Bundled Payments/Episodes of Care, Capitated Risk, Direct Contracting, Hospital Global Budgets, Medicaid Waivers
- Key Challenges Facing VBC: After more than a decade of models and testing, what do we know about impact and outcomes of VBC? Why isn’t VBC the standard?
- Market Trends: Who’s Leading VBC – Case Studies from Health Systems, Payers, Primary Care Group Practices, and VBC Start-Ups
The Mechanics of Value-Based Care (in person)
- Provider Behavior and Incentives: What does health transformation look like for health providers and leaders? Primary care vs. specialty care – where is VBC most likely to succeed? How is outcomes measurement evolving to support VBC? Contrasting status quo delivery as reactive and encounter-based vs. pro-active, outcome-based, high-value care at a lower cost
- Delivery Redesign: What does it take to redesign care? Exploring the analytics, engagement strategies, attribution, clinical models, and measurement and feedback loops needed to optimize outcomes and lower costs
- Risk Adjustment, Benchmarking, and Attribution: Getting it right (and what happens if you don’t)
- Payer Perspective: How do payers define VBC? What motivates payers to invest in VBC strategies? How does the strategy vary by market?
- Fireside Chat with Investors: Investing in the mechanics (analytics, provider and patient engagement, clinical care delivery) - What Makes a VBC Model Viable? How do investors evaluate upfront high-risk investments needed to get a VBC company off the ground?
Scaling Innovation (in person)
- Contracting Basics: Legal, financial, ethical, and actuarial realities, and negotiating for results
- Pathways to Scale: Scaling through public programs (Medicare/Medicaid), commercial payers, direct-to-consumer/provider, challenges to scaling
- Fireside Chat: Policy, Politics, and the Future of VBC (with current and former CMS/CMMI leaders)
Weekly Online Seminars
- Understanding the Payer Landscape
- Capitation vs. FFS Hybrid
- Designing Contracts and Negotiating with Payers
- Tech and VBC Enablement
- Social Drivers and Health Equity in Value-Based Care
- Measuring What Matters
- Employer and Purchaser Strategies
- The Investor View
- Government Perspective and Regulatory Landscape
- Future Forward
Hopkins Bloomberg Center
The Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg Center at 555 Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington D.C. pairs the power of nearly 150 years of research leadership with a deep commitment to democracy and government innovation in a vibrant new convening space. The majestic building features modern, configurable spaces that will heighten collaboration between trusted academic experts, global leaders and policymakers, and the next generation of innovators and leaders.
This is where students and faculty transform knowledge into impact, and where cutting-edge research informs evidence-based policies to benefit global democracy and the future of our world.
Additional Program Details
Key Benefits
- Explore successful organizational transformations to value-based health care.
- Gain insight into considerations involved in transitioning to value-based care.
- Learn to leverage behavioral economics and risk analytics when leading teams.
- Enhance emotional intelligence and negotiation skills to engage stakeholders across the organization in transformative change.
- Hear about the latest health care IT systems.
- Network with faculty, alumni and peer executives across sectors and disciplines.
- Fully online format to respect the busy schedules of health care executives.
Faculty
Core Faculty
Elizabeth Fowler, PhD, JD
Co-Director
Distinguished Scholar
Purva Rawal, PhD
Co-Director
Stacey B. Lee, JD
Associate Professor
The Johns Hopkins Carey Business School
Curriculum Chair: Negotiation
Daniel Polsky, PhD
Bloomberg Distinguished Professor of Health Economics
Johns Hopkins University
Guest Faculty – Industry Leaders
2026 guest faculty will be listed soon
What Participants Say
“A lot of the magic of the experience was the broad diversity of disciplines represented.”
Marty Basso, CPA
Chief Financial Officer
Sibley Memorial Hospital and Suburban Hospital, Johns Hopkins Medicine
“It’s definitely had an impact in the way that I approach managing and looking at ways of cost saving and also leveraging some of the things I learned in the course to create value to the patients that we treat.”
Timothy M. Pawlik, MD, MPH, PhD
Professor and Chair, Department of Surgery
Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center
“It brings the expertise from four different schools—from the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, the School of Nursing, the Carey Business School and the Bloomberg School of Public Health. That kind of breadth and depth of knowledge is embedded in the program.”
-Bill Baumgartner, MD
Former Senior Vice President, Office of Physicians
Johns Hopkins Medicine
International Participants
Participants who are not U.S. citizens or U.S. Permanent Residents must be admitted to the U.S. in the appropriate visa status. International participants seeking to attend courses onsite in the U.S. must be able to secure their own immigration sponsorship (such as B1/B2 visitor) or enter the U.S. under the Visa Waiver Program (through ESTA).
It can take time to secure the appropriate visa stamp to enter the United States, so please plan accordingly. The Department of State makes estimated visa wait times available on their website.
Questions?
For general inquiries about the Leading Transformation for Value-Based Health Care program, contact:
Keasha Wormley
Sr. Academic Adviser
LTVHprogram@jh.edu
For inquiries about how to involve your management team in the program, contact:
Elizabeth Fowler
Distinguished Scholar
Program Director
liz.fowler@jhu.edu