“…The American College of Cardiology and American Heart Association offered guidelines to improve patient-centered and team-based care including via enhanced patient-clinician communication, assessment of patient-centered outcomes and perspectives, shared decision-making, collaborative care planning, and goal setting (Krumholz et al, 2006; Levine et al, 2021; Walsh et al, 2012). As many newer, value-based models integrating behavioral health expertise have only been studied in the primary care setting or in other somatic populations (Bridges et al, 2015; Jacobsen et al, 2019; Woltmann et al, 2012), there is a need to systematically test and quantify integrated care models for CVD in the specialty care setting, where CVD populations, especially the sickest, are primarily managed. Behavioral interventions for cardiovascular specialty populations are cost-effective in randomized controlled trials (Davidson et al, 2013, 2010; Huffman et al, 2014; Kronish et al, 2012; Rollman et al, 2009; Writing Committee for the ENRICHD Investigators, 2003), but we lack systematic, real-world evidence about how programs perform and improve outcomes at practice or health system levels in a cardiovascular specialty service line.…”