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Make America Healthy Again: Enhancing Lifestyle & Evaluating Value-based Approaches Through Evidence (MAHA ELEVATE) Model is sponsored by Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (CMMI). This voluntary, three-year service delivery model tests evidence-based, whole-person functional or lifestyle medicine ("whole-person FLM") approaches to care.
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MAHA ELEVATE (Make America Healthy Again: Enhancing Lifestyle and Evaluating Value-based Approaches Through Evidence) Model | CMS MAHA ELEVATE (Make America Healthy Again: Enhancing Lifestyle and Evaluating Value-based Approaches Through Evidence) Model MAHA ELEVATE Model Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) The application deadline for Cohort 1 has now passed.
CMS will not consider any applications submitted after May 15, 2026,11:59 pm ET, eligible for Cohort 1. Please check your Grants. gov account to find confirmation that CMS received your application.
All applicants will receive a notification from CMS regardless of selection. Selected applicants will receive a Notice of Award in Fall 2026. Non-selected applicants will be notified after recipients.
CMS is not able to provide status updates on any applications during review. The Make America Healthy Again: Enhancing Lifestyle and Evaluating Value-based Approaches Through Evidence (MAHA ELEVATE) Model is part of the Administration’s bold plan to reform America’s health systems to address the chronic disease epidemic.
The model will provide approximately $100 million to fund 3-year cooperative agreements for up to 30 proposals that promote health and prevention for Original Medicare beneficiaries. The proposals will utilize evidence-based, whole-person care approaches — including functional or lifestyle medicine interventions — currently not covered by Original Medicare.
These approaches are intended to support, not replace, the medical care received by people with Medicare. MAHA ELEVATE will also gather and evaluate new data on cost and quality to inform future interventions promoting healthy lifestyle behaviors and ultimately reduce spending in Original Medicare. The first cohort of this voluntary model will launch October 2026.
Problem: Whole-person functional or lifestyle medicine interventions, including those focused on nutrition and physical activity, may slow or prevent chronic disease; however, more evidence is needed to understand which interventions work best for older populations and can be applied across Original Medicare to promote healthy lifestyles.
Solution: The MAHA ELEVATE Model will evaluate up to 30 evidence-based proposals with proven success to determine which may best support conventional care and suit the health promotion and disease prevention needs of people with Original Medicare.
Outcomes: Interventions tested in MAHA ELEVATE will inform future Original Medicare coverage determinations or potential future CMS Innovation Center models designed to improve the health of beneficiaries and cut health care costs.
Strategy: By testing whole-person approaches to care, MAHA ELEVATE aims to help transform the U.S. health care system to one that proactively addresses the root causes of chronic disease rather than reactively addressing symptoms. MAHA ELEVATE will evaluate impacts on cost and quality of evidence-based whole-person care, including functional or lifestyle medicine interventions, in an Original Medicare population.
In 2022, approximately 45% of people with Medicare had four or more chronic conditions , and people with chronic conditions accounted for nearly 90% of total health care spending . The American health system primarily focuses on treating the symptoms of these conditions and managing diseases. Through this model, CMS aims to address the core lifestyle choices and human behaviors that are associated with the prevention of chronic disease.
Preventive measures begin with empowering people to build healthy practices they can sustain outside of clinicians’ offices to help meet their health goals. Over time, this approach is expected to lead to a healthier population and to lower health care costs.
Establish in Original Medicare a novel U.S. evidence base — featuring cost and quality data — on the effectiveness of whole-person functional or lifestyle medicine approaches to care, including psychological, nutritional and physical interventions. Empower patients to take control of their health through lifestyle changes.
Prevent illness and promote wellness through novel approaches to supporting people in behavior changes aimed at improving health or slowing and/or reversing disease progression. MAHA ELEVATE is the first Innovation Center model to focus on proactive, holistic, patient-centered functional or lifestyle medicine approaches to support conventional care.
It combines psychological, nutritional, and physical interventions along with self-care strategies to address the whole person rather than individual disease, to help promote wellness and prevent illness. Critical areas of focus include nutrition, physical activity, sleep, stress management, harmful substance avoidance, and social connection.
CMS will fund up to 30 cooperative agreements through MAHA ELEVATE, with a total budget of approximately $100 million over a 3-year performance period to collect quality and cost data on whole-person functional or lifestyle medicine interventions, as a support to — not in lieu of — conventional medicine.
Proposals should include services not already covered by Original Medicare but with documented evidence of the intervention’s efficacy. The cooperative agreements will be awarded to organizations with experience integrating and measuring the impact of such approaches to health and wellness, with scientifically documented improvements in health.
Awardees will work with CMS to create a plan for data collection, quality, measurement, recruitment and cost containment. All proposals must incorporate nutrition or physical activity as part of the design. Three awards will be reserved for interventions that address dementia.
Cooperative agreements will be awarded in two rounds for two separate cohorts — one starting in 2026 and the second in 2027. MAHA ELEVATE recipients will be organizations that either provide whole-person functional or lifestyle medicine services directly to patients or partner with other organizations to deliver services.
Eligible MAHA ELEVATE applicants may include: Private medical practices Health systems and accountable care organizations (ACOs) Functional, lifestyle, preventive and integrative medicine centers Federally Qualified Health Centers and Rural Health Clinics Community-based organizations State or local governments Indian Health Service/Tribal Services/Urban Indian Programs Senior living communities To be selected, applicants must demonstrate that they — or their partners — are experienced in delivering these interventions and that the interventions are safe and effective for the target population and supported by peer-reviewed literature.
Additionally, they must demonstrate experience with data collection or the ability to accurately collect and report data in a timely manner, with appropriate beneficiary safeguards. MAHA ELEVATE recipients will select a chronic condition or conditions and identify the interventions they will offer to their Original Medicare patients.
HHS MAHA in Action webpage MAHA ELEVATE Model Project Narrative Template MAHA ELEVATE Model Tables Template MAHA ELEVATE Frequently Asked Questions MAHA ELEVATE Frequently Asked Questions webcast MAHA ELEVATE Notice of Funding Opportunity webcast Contact the MAHA ELEVATE team at mahaelevate@cms. hhs. gov .
Visit our Innovation Model webpage for a list of all CMS Innovation Center model tests. Number of Participants: N/A Category: Statutory Demonstrations and Other Projects Authority: Section 1115A of the Social Security Act CMS Innovation Center Highlights Learn about topics that play a critical role in our work on our Key Concepts webpage . Read stories about our work in action in the Value-Based Care Spotlight .
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According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Unrestricted, open to any type of entity that meets the requirements outlined in the NOFO. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
Make America Healthy Again: Enhancing Lifestyle & Evaluating Value-based Approaches Through Evidence (MAHA ELEVATE) Model is funded by Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (CMMI). Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
Yes — this listing is flagged as national in scope, so applicants across the U.S. may apply, subject to the sponsor's other eligibility criteria.
Applications go through the funder's official portal — the Apply Now link on this page goes there directly.
CMS is funding up to 30 organizations to test whole-person preventive care for Medicare beneficiaries. LOI due April 10. What MAHA ELEVATE covers, who qualifies, and how to compete.
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