Responsibilities
- Own the creation and development of Chamber’s clinical impact reporting — building the infrastructure, methodology, and narratives that demonstrate program effectiveness to payers, partners, and leadership.
- Lead primary analysis across cost trends, utilization impact, clinical effectiveness, and economic and operational efficiency — connecting data to outcomes in ways that are clear, credible, and compelling.
- Serve as the primary thought leader behind Chamber’s health economics story — defining how we measure success and how we communicate it.
- Partner directly with Chamber’s senior executives as a key analytical stakeholder, providing the evidence base that informs strategic decisions.
- Scale Chamber’s Health Economics team and analytical platform as the business grows — building systems, processes, and people that can support an expanding contract portfolio.
- Work with ambiguous data and requests without flinching — you can turn incomplete inputs into defensible, actionable outputs.
- Leverage SQL, AI prompting, Excel, and PowerPoint to build analyses that are both rigorous and accessible to non-technical audiences.
Requirements
- 4–8 years of experience in health economics.
- Fluency with value-based care performance metrics — TCOC, avoidable inpatient utilization(APK), utilization benchmarks, quality measures, and economic efficiency indicators. You know what good looks like and can identify when something is off before it becomes a problem.
- Demonstrated ability to own analytical work end-to-end — not just running queries, but forming hypotheses, designing the analysis, and communicating what it means.
- High tolerance for ambiguity — you can work with messy data and unclear briefs and still produce output that is clear, defensible, and useful.
- Proficiency in SQL, Excel, and PowerPoint. Comfort with AI prompting tools as part of your analytical workflow.
- Strong written and verbal communication skills. You can present complex health economics findings to senior executives without losing them or oversimplifying.
- Critical thinker with a ‘scrappy’ operating style — you build what’s needed, when it’s needed, without waiting for perfect conditions.
- Bachelor’s degree in health economics, public health, biostatistics, or a related field.
- Genuine passion for improving outcomes for cardiology patients and the independent physicians who care for them.
Work Arrangement
Hybrid