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Sunday, February 1, 2026

Cost, Community Health Workers, and the Quintuple Aim

 


The Quintuple Aim is a framework developed by the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI, 2025) to understand and improve health system performance. Originally proposed as the Triple Aim in 2012, the framework focused on improving population health, enhancing patient experience, and reducing health care costs. Over time, the model expanded to include other human and equity dimensions of care, resulting in the Quintuple Aim: population health, patient experience, cost, provider well-being, and health equity.

In prior discussions, we explored population health and patient experience, highlighting the essential role Community Health Workers (CHWs) play in delivering high-quality, team-based care. This month, we will discuss cost, which is often considered the most challenging aspect of the Quintuple Aim.

What does “cost” mean in the Quintuple Aim?

In the context of the Triple Aim, cost refers to the total cost of care for a population.  While total cost of care (TCOC) includes the price of services, it is broader and more complex.  TCOC includes avoidable emergency department use, inpatient admissions and readmissions, duplication of services (such as tests and medications), inappropriate utilization, and waste caused by inefficiencies. 

Increased health care costs place financial strain on patients, families, employers/purchasers, payers, and government programs (e.g., Medicare and Medicaid).  The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) is a group of 37 economically developed member countries that shape policies that foster prosperity, equality, opportunity, and well-being for all (OECD, 2025).  The United States has the highest health care cost per capita of all OECD countries.  However, this increased spending does not consistently improve outcomes. For example, certain important U.S. health outcomes (life expectancy, maternal mortality, and hospitalizations for heart failure and diabetes) also exceed all OECD countries (Peterson KFF Health Systems Tracker, 2025). 

Consistent with the Quintuple Aim and the Chronic Care Model (Wagner, 1998), achieving health care value (decreasing cost while simultaneously improving quality outcomes) will depend on shifting from reactive care to proactive, coordinated, community-based approaches that address utilization drivers. 

Cost and Social Determinates/drivers of Health (SDOH)

A significant portion of health care spending is driven by Social Determinants/drivers of Health (SDOH).  We often refer to “upstream” and “downstream” care.  Downstream care occurs after a problem is identified by treating symptoms and managing associated complications.  Upstream care focuses on prevention, root causes, and addressing conditions before illnesses or problems occur. When individuals have unmet SDOH needs (e.g., food insecurity, unstable housing, transportation barriers, lack of access to primary care) they are more likely to delay care and experience worsening chronic conditions. This cycle often results in high-cost services, such as emergency department visits and inpatient admissions where care remains downstream.  Moving care upstream will require us to understand how social and environmental factors influence downstream utilization and to invest in strategies to prevent avoidable costs before they occur.

The role of Community Health Workers (CHWs) in cost reduction

Community Health Workers (CHWs) play a critical role in advancing the cost dimension of the Quintuple Aim. As we have discussed, CHWs are trusted members of the communities they serve and bridge gaps between clinical care and everyday life. Their lived experience and cultural responsiveness, including using the patient’s primary language, enable CHWs to identify SDOH needs and other barriers to support patients and health teams.  The figure below estimates the percentages of TCOC components and potential CHW impact:

CHWs help reduce costs by:

-       Educating patients on self-management using evidence-base “teach-back,” “show-back,” and motivational interviewing techniques to increase preventive care utilization and reduce inpatient admissions

-       Improving follow-up after emergency department visits, redirecting patients to primary care and potentially preventing future inappropriate ED use

-       Connecting patients to community-based resources that address SDOH

By addressing root causes rather than symptoms alone, CHWs help shift care upstream, improving outcomes while lowering unnecessary utilization and TCOC.

Investing in CHWs as a cost containment strategy

Increasing evidence shows that CHWs are not an added expense but a high-value investment. When integrated effectively into care teams, CHWs contribute to lower utilization, improved quality outcomes, and improved patient and provider experience, advancing multiple dimensions of the Quintuple Aim.

The Practice Transformation Institute (PTI) CHW educational programs are designed to strengthen CHW knowledge, performance, and impact. PTI is an approved provider of Community Health Worker training by the Michigan Department of Health & Human Services (MDHHS), following a rigorous approval process and years of community and health system partnership. PTI is also uniquely distinguished by its IACET accreditation, underscoring its commitment to training excellence.

PTI’s CHW program teaches the nationally recognized C3 Council competencies and equips participants with the skills needed to function effectively across a variety of community and health care settings. This robust training supports CHWs in contributing meaningfully to cost reduction, improved outcomes, and sustainable system transformation.

Investing in prevention, care coordination, and community-based solutions can improve outcomes while managing costs more effectively. CHWs are central to this effort, helping align clinical care with SDOH and other patient needs to advance the Quintuple Aim in practice.

References

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (2025).  National healthcare quality and disparities reports.  Refer to reference in figure.

Institute for Healthcare Improvement. (2025). The Quintuple Aim.

Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (2025).  The OECD: Better policies for better lives.  Retrieved from https://www.oecd.org/en/about.html

Peterson KFF Health Systems Tracker (2025).  How does the quality of the U.S. health system compare to other countries?  Retrieved from https://www.healthsystemtracker.org/chart-collection/quality-u-s-healthcare-system-compare-countries/

Wagner, E. H. (1998). Chronic disease management: What will it take to improve care for chronic illness? Effective Clinical Practice, 1, 2–4.