Wednesday, December 24, 2025

CVS to launch ‘engagement’ platform in gamble on consumer, industry interest

This audio is auto-generated. Please let us know if you have feedback.

CVS plans to launch a first-of-its-kind healthcare engagement platform, banking that perennial gripes about poor access and navigation will incentivize both consumers and rival companies to sign on.

The platform will include data and services offered by CVS’ different health businesses — and those of participating industry partners. The goal is to create an integrated healthcare experience for consumers, hopefully enhancing their experience with the industry, lowering costs and improving outcomes, CVS executives said Tuesday during the healthcare giant’s investor day in Hartford, Connecticut. 

CVS is also banking that the platform will also be a source of revenue by driving consumers to CVS products and services they might not know about otherwise.

CVS did not respond to questions about how much it’s spending to build the platform or how much revenue the company expects the platform to generate. The platform’s eventual value depends on if CVS is able to convince its peers in the insurance and pharmacy sectors to integrate their own data and products — not a sure bet in today’s hyper-competitive healthcare landscape.

Yet the app should help drive growth, according to one analyst.

“We look forward to hearing more but see the totality of the CVS enterprise as ripe for building out a platform like this,” Leerink analyst Michael Cherny wrote in a Tuesday note on the company’s investor day.

The engagement play

Improving customer engagement is a white whale for the healthcare sector at a time when roughly one-third of Americans don’t even have a primary care provider. Physician shortages, high healthcare prices, and confusing and complex processes have made it difficult for the average American to access healthcare, with high percentages of consumers reporting delaying or eschewing care altogether due to such factors.

The healthcare sector was laser-focused on becoming more consumer-centric prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, spurring hospitals and insurers to invest more heavily in initiatives to improve consumer engagement and experience. Though such initiatives have yielded few concrete improvements systemwide, healthcare executives say they remain a high priority. And consumerism’s importance is still evident in rising direct-to-consumer initiatives — especially in the pharmacy space.

Now, CVS is hoping that its new “engagement as a service” platform can further improve Americans’ experiences with the healthcare system, driving more revenue to its businesses along the way.

“Strong consumer engagement — a lot of companies have stood up here and said that they’re going to do that. It still remains elusive,” said Prem Shah, CVS’ executive vice president and group president, during the investor day. “Our industry has chased engagement but no one has yet caught it.”

Executives said that CVS will be able to succeed due to the company’s broad consumer reach across its Aetna health insurance, pharmacy benefit manager Caremark and retail pharmacy businesses.

Of CVS’ 185 million consumers, roughly 62 million engage with the company digitally. Twenty-one million have given CVS permission to reach them in real-time through push messaging, according to Tilak Mandadi, CVS’ chief experience and technology officer.

Creating an “everything app” combining multiple services into one platform is an idea CVS has been toying with for years. The company has taken steps by building out its CVS Health app, which now includes health benefits, pharmacy benefits, prescriptions and other data pulled from CVS’ own businesses.

But the new open engagement platform will go notably further. The platform will include a comprehensive profile for each consumer by pulling data from electronic health records, pharmacy claims, and home health and wearable devices.

It will be able to help consumers find new doctors, schedule visits and tests, and manage claims and appeals. It can suggest relevant resources and actions consumers should take to better their health or finances, like the availability of a cheaper alternative for a drug they’re taking, according to CVS.

Executives said that the platform is being built with artificial intelligence at its core, and will include an agentic AI chatbot to help consumers navigate coverage and care decisions.

A visualization of CVS' new open consumer experience platform.

A graphic of CVS’ new open consumer experience platform shared during the company’s 2025 investor day.

Rebecca Pifer/Healthcare Dive

 

But the largest thing that will set CVS’ platform apart from the some-250,000 digital health apps available in the U.S. is its potential integration with other healthcare companies.

Source link

Hot this week

SMEs value customisable cover when choosing an insurer

Industry research indicates that SME customers choose insurance...

Here’s what you still have time to do

Aire Images | Moment | Getty ImagesAs the...

“The Majority of a Broker’s Revenue Comes from Its B-Book Functionality,” Kieran Duff at FMLS:25

“The majority of revenue for a broker and, you know,...

Topics

Related Articles

Popular Categories