Medical and Health Services Listings

This page documents the structure, scope, and classification logic of medical and health services listings published across this reference network. Entries span care management programs, clinical support services, workforce roles, payer frameworks, and regulatory compliance topics relevant to the United States healthcare system. Understanding how listings are organized helps readers locate authoritative information on specific programs, navigate provider and payer distinctions, and assess regulatory context without relying on marketing or promotional materials.


What each listing covers

Each listing functions as a structured reference entry for a distinct service category, program type, or operational domain within care management and health services. Listings are not provider directories and do not recommend specific organizations, clinicians, or vendors. The content within each entry reflects published regulatory definitions, payer program specifications, accreditation standards, and clinical practice frameworks drawn from named public authorities.

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) defines several care management service categories through the Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) billing code system — including Chronic Care Management (CPT 99490), Transitional Care Management (CPT 99495/99496), and Complex Chronic Care Management (CPT 99487) — and listings in this network align their scope to those defined service boundaries. Additional classification draws from the Case Management Society of America (CMSA) Standards of Practice for Case Management, the National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA) accreditation criteria, and the Joint Commission's care coordination standards.

Listings covering condition-specific programs — such as diabetes care management, cardiovascular care management, and oncology care management — separate clinical monitoring protocols from administrative coordination functions, reflecting the operational distinction CMS draws between clinical and non-clinical care management activities.


Geographic distribution

All listings on this site carry national scope, meaning content reflects federal statutes, CMS program rules, and nationally recognized accreditation frameworks rather than single-state regulations. Where state-level variation is material — such as Medicaid managed care program structures, scope-of-practice laws governing care managers, or state-specific chronic disease management mandates — listings note the existence of variation without replicating 50-state statutory tables.

Medicaid care management programs operate under 1115 and 1915(b) waiver authorities administered through CMS, with individual state Medicaid agencies holding operational authority over program design. This means that a listing covering Medicaid care management programs describes federal framework elements and common state-level implementation patterns, not a single authoritative national standard.

Medicare Advantage plan-administered care management programs are governed by 42 CFR Part 422, which establishes baseline requirements that all participating plans must meet, while individual plan benefit designs vary. Listings covering Medicare programs cite 42 CFR Part 422 and relevant CMS guidance documents to mark where federal minimums end and plan discretion begins.

Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs), which number more than 1,400 grantee organizations operating over 14,000 service delivery sites according to the Health Resources & Services Administration (HRSA), represent a distinct service delivery context addressed in listings related to integrated care management models and social determinants of health in care management.


How to read an entry

Each listing is organized around a defined set of content elements. Readers navigating individual topic pages should interpret the structure as follows:

  1. Scope statement — identifies the program type, service category, or regulatory domain covered, and names the primary governing authority (e.g., CMS, NCQA, URAC, Joint Commission).
  2. Regulatory or standards framework — cites the specific statute, regulation section, or accreditation standard that defines the service boundary. CPT codes, CFR citations, and named guideline documents appear here.
  3. Operational mechanism — describes how the service, program, or framework functions in practice, including eligibility criteria, delivery modalities, and required personnel qualifications where those are codified.
  4. Classification boundaries — distinguishes the listed item from adjacent categories. For example, the distinction between care coordination vs. care management is a structural boundary that appears repeatedly across entries because CMS and NCQA treat these as separate functions with different billing and accreditation implications.
  5. Workforce and role context — notes credentialing requirements where standardized, referencing the Commission for Case Manager Certification (CCMC) and CMSA standards as applicable.
  6. Quality and measurement references — links to relevant metrics frameworks, such as HEDIS measures maintained by NCQA or CMS Star Ratings criteria, covered in depth at care management quality metrics.

Entries do not contain editorial rankings, comparative ratings of organizations, or cost-effectiveness claims unsupported by named published research.


What listings include and exclude

Included content categories:

Excluded content categories:

The boundary between included and excluded content reflects the reference-grade purpose of this network, described in the medical and health services directory purpose and scope overview. Listings aim to orient readers within the regulatory and operational landscape of care management without substituting for primary source documents, legal counsel, or clinical guidance from licensed professionals.

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