CMS ACCESS co-management · For independent practices

You're already doing the work. Start capturing the revenue.

You field the 8 AM fluid-overload calls and titrate medications between visits — without billing for any of it. US-LTN becomes your remote lifestyle-medicine wing: we absorb 100% of the operational friction, you keep the patient and the CMS ACCESS co-management codes.

60 minutes at your office. We identify your first 50 eligible patients.
Two physicians in conversation between patient visits
Financial projections

Project your practice's passive revenue.

Under the CMS ACCESS model, referring PCPs are paid by CMS for co-managing patients alongside our clinical pods: ~$10 per patient at onboarding, plus ~$30 per quarterly review, billed three times a year.

Estimates vary ± by state. Your practice incurs zero hardware or labor cost.

Eligible Medicare patients 200patients
Initial onboarding revenue ($10/pt)$2,000
Annual co-management ($90/pt)$18,000
Required practice clinical labor0 hours
Total projected annual revenue$20,000

How it works — zero new overhead.

The workflow
1 The panel scrub

A US-LTN care guide securely audits your Medicare panel on-site to identify eligible, high-risk patients. We do the work.

2 Hardware deployment

We drop-ship pre-activated 4G scales and cuffs to your patients. No Wi-Fi, no smartphones — they plug it into the wall.

3 24/7 clinical triage

Our 1:1:4 pod monitors daily biometrics. A 3-pound overnight gain triggers our protocol before the patient calls your office.

4 Three short reviews a year

Three times a year: review a 1-page clinical summary in your EHR, drop the co-management code, collect the revenue.

Limited partnerships this quarter

Let us prove the model.

To keep our clinical pods at strict 1:1:4 safety ratios, we limit new practice partnerships. Our team can conduct a complimentary 60-minute panel scrub at your office next week.

Enter your email (phone optional) — we'll reach out to set a time.

"Before you heal someone, ask him if he's willing to give up the things that make him sick." — Hippocrates