The era of the ‘bold growth’ narrative has come to a halt. At this year’s JP Morgan Healthcare Conference, the conversations weren’t filled with the usual topics of mergers and aggressive expansion. Instead, industry leaders reverted back to something much more demanding: stability and operational discipline.
Here are my top 5 takeaways from the event and what they signal for health system leaders who are willing to navigate and embrace these shifts.
1. Back to Basics: Stability Over Scale
The most consistent theme among non-profit health systems was a return to the fundamentals. There was a shift in focus from ambitious growth or mega-mergers to stability and consistency being the focal point. This shift reflects a convergence of pressures: roughly $1 trillion in projected Medicaid cuts over the coming decade, labor inflation, persistent claims denials, and regulatory uncertainty.
In this current environment, the message is clear: before pursuing what’s next, organizations must first stabilize what they have to maintain profitability and demonstrate financial resiliency to bond investors.
2. Workforce Optimization Needs Workforce Intelligence
Another key theme indicated that workforce challenges remain front and center, but the conversation is changing. While nursing shortages and contingent labor costs are still major concerts, leaders also discussed recruitment and retention across physicians and advanced practice providers.
What really stood out was the increasing use of data and AI to drive smarter workforce decisions validating our most recent solution release, Axuall Sync.
3. Integration as a Value Driver
For health systems that have recently merged or are pursuing internal consolidation, integration was a central narrative for demonstrating value creation.
This went beyond their own assets, as Jeff Flaks, CEO Hartford HealthCare, emphasized a care-delivery partnership across the ecosystem. Many leaders emphasized “nontraditional partnerships” to embrace this theme including:
- One Medical (20 primary care centers)
- K Health for virtual primary care
- Uber for patient transportation
- Google for its AI platforms
4. Ambulatory Expansion and Portfolio Optimization
Another clear theme was the aggressive expansion of ambulatory footprints within non-profit health systems. These systems are actively divesting underperforming assets and focusing on convenient, community-based care based on customer preferences and the opportunity to optimize capital allocation.
5. Revenue Cycle Resiliency and Denial Management
Finally, with margin pressures intensifying, health systems placed significant emphasis on revenue cycle management and claims denial reduction as critical operational priorities. Leaders spoke openly about the impact of improving revenue cycle resiliency and the importance of protecting margins without compromising care.
Ultimately, the era of ‘growth at all costs’ is over, and we have officially entered the era of operational accountability. The takeaway from JPM is clear: the industry is no longer rewarding size, it is rewarding the discipline to execute. While others are distracted by the noise, the healthcare leaders who will win in 2026 are those ruthlessly optimizing their most valuable asset: their workforce.
At Axuall, we aren’t just sitting back and watching this shift, we are providing the real world data and intelligence required to lead it. The question for leaders now isn’t how big you can get, but how smart you can move.