With all the focus on value-based care it’s interesting that there is no single definition of value. In trying to reduce the definition for healthcare to a formula there is general agreement that the denominator of value is cost. Various numerator definitions attempt to describe benefit. A quick search on the internet reveals numerators ranging from simply “quality” to “quality +service + access.” Beyond this variation there’s no standard definition of quality, service or access. For that matter there is inconsistency in defining cost as price vs. the overall impact on costs. Clarifying this concept of value in healthcare is increasingly important as providers face the challenge of entering into a variety of value based contracts that embody inconsistent definitions of value. This issue is particularly important as health plans and providers consider the adoption and dissemination of new technologies. While quantitative estimates vary from 25-75%, there is general agreement that new technology is a major driver of overall medical cost trend.1 Let’s assume that the value of a new technology involves an estimate of its incremental benefit divided by an estimate of its impact on overall costs. The difficulty of calculating the cost is evident in the wide range of estimates just cited regarding the overall cost impact of new technology. This variation is a reflection of the multiple and complex ways that technology can impact overall costs. It may substitute for an existing service; expand the number of treatable conditions; enable more aggressive treatments; intensify the use of technology for the same condition; drive changes in operational efficiencies that impact health system capacity; broaden the definition of diseases; or extend life, for which each patient induces additional years of health care consumption.2 Depending on how the individual innovation is priced and integrated into care, each of these types of impacts can put upward or downward pressure on overall medical costs. Furthermore, it’s very possible that a new technology will increase costs in the short run but reduce them over time, or vice versa. When Sovaldi was introduced six years ago for the treatment of hepatitis C, it dramatically increased short term cost trends, but held the promise of reducing long term costs by removing the need for future liver transplants. On the other hand, introduction of laparoscopic cholecystectomies reduced the cost of this procedure initially but increased overall costs in the long run by expanding the number of people undergoing the procedure. Of course, each of these innovations created benefit independent of their cost implications.