Medicaid is entering a period where coverage alone won’t be enough.
As redeterminations, work requirements, and budget pressure increase churn, Medicaid plans will face a harder performance test: not just whether members are covered, but whether high-risk members remain reachable, engaged, connected to care, and out of avoidable crisis settings.
For many of Medicaid’s highest-need members, the problem isn’t that services don’t exist. It’s that the system can’t consistently reach the people who need those services most.
The engagement gap is now a performance problem
Plans are expected to improve quality, reduce avoidable emergency department use, manage transitions, close gaps in care, document health-related social needs, and connect members to support. But all of those goals depend on one basic condition: the member has to be engaged.
Before a plan can close a care gap, someone has to find the member. Before avoidable utilization can be reduced, someone has to understand why the emergency department has become the default point of care.
Too often, “unable to contact” is treated as an administrative category. It should be treated as an early warning sign.
For high-risk Medicaid populations, being unreachable can mean a disconnected phone, housing instability, untreated behavioral health needs, transportation barriers, food insecurity, fear of institutions, low trust, or eligibility churn. It can mean a member is sharing a phone, missing mail, avoiding unknown numbers, or overwhelmed by paperwork they don’t understand.
In that context, “unable to contact” doesn’t simply mean a phone call failed. It may mean the system is losing visibility at the exact moment risk is rising.
Technology can identify need, but it doesn’t always build trust
This is where traditional outreach models begin to fall short.
Case management by phone, reminders via text, portals, and AI-supported outreach can help identify risk, prioritize outreach, organize workflows, and route people to resources. Technology should absolutely be part of the answer.
But technology can make outreach smarter. It cannot make it human.
A call center can identify that a care gap exists. It cannot always reveal why that gap exists. An algorithm can flag a member as high risk. It cannot sit with someone in a shelter, notice that food insecurity is driving medication nonadherence, or learn that a missed appointment was not apathy but transportation, fear, or unstable housing.
For many high-risk members, engagement has to move from the phone into the community.
That means meeting people where they actually are: in homes, apartment buildings, shelters, clinics, food distribution lines, community centers, encampments, and other local settings. It means understanding the reality around the member, not just the information in the file. It means recognizing that the barrier to care may not be clinical at first. It may be trust.
Showing up is what makes trust possible
There is something deeply human about this work.
It’s the difference between leaving a voicemail and finding out the member’s phone has been disconnected for months. It’s the difference between mailing a care plan and realizing the person doesn’t have a stable address. It’s the difference between documenting a missed appointment and understanding that the member had no transportation or no reason to believe anyone would help if they showed up.
For many high-risk Medicaid members, engagement begins when someone does something simple but powerful: shows up.
Shows up at the shelter. Shows up at the apartment building. Shows up at the clinic. Shows up at the food distribution site. Shows up again after the first conversation doesn’t go anywhere.
That kind of presence matters because trust is rarely built in one interaction. It’s built through consistency, patience, and follow-through. It’s built when a member realizes the person reaching out isn’t just checking a box but trying to understand what’s getting in the way of care.
Follow-through is where Medicaid interventions succeed or fail
Community field outreach can reveal what remote models miss: whether a member has food, whether the home is safe, whether medications are being taken, whether paperwork is piling up, whether behavioral health needs are escalating, whether transportation is realistic, and whether a member understands what needs to happen next.
It also creates the conditions for follow-through.
A screening tool can identify a social need. A referral can point someone toward a service. A discharge plan can list the next appointment. But if no one stays connected long enough to make sure the member can act, the system has not solved the problem. It has only documented it.
Plans and states will increasingly need to show real-world outcomes: fewer avoidable emergency department visits, stronger primary care engagement, better quality metrics, more stable social supports, and fewer members cycling in and out of crisis. Those outcomes depend on sustained engagement, not episodic outreach.
Engagement should not be treated as a front-end activity or a soft measure. For many high-risk members, engagement is the first clinical intervention. It turns a referral into an actual connection and helps plans understand whether a member is improving, deteriorating, or disappearing from view.
The next era will reward plans that can reach people
The future of Medicaid performance will require both technology and human presence. Digital tools can help plans see risk earlier, coordinate more efficiently, and scale communication. But for members most likely to end up in costly crisis settings, the last mile of engagement is often human.
The organizations that perform best will not simply be those with the best analytics or scripts. They will be the ones that can consistently find hard-to-reach members, rebuild trust, connect them to care, follow through over time, and demonstrate that engagement changes outcomes.
Medicaid cannot manage what it cannot reach.
As churn, work requirements, and budget pressure reshape the program, coverage matters. Benefits matter. Technology matters. But for Medicaid’s highest-need members, none of it works unless someone can engage the person behind the file.
Meeting members where they are isn’t a slogan. It’s a performance strategy.
Scott H. Schnell is co-founder and chief executive officer of MedZed, a for-profit provider of community-based services to address the Health-Related Social Needs of high-risk, high-need Medicaid and dual-eligible Medicare members who are hard to reach and disengaged from primary healthcare. Since starting the company in 2014 with the mission to inspire and enable better health, Schnell has developed MedZed’s business model, technology platform and member acquisition plan to partner with managed health plans to improve member health outcomes, lower utilization rates and reduce costs. An entrepreneur for several decades, Schnell has started, grown, led and sold several companies.
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