 Health care is primed for change. For too long, gaps in communication and collaboration among system stakeholders have made it harder for patients to access cohesive care. The challenges have been magnified by COVID-19, creating even more urgency to reimagine the health system to work better for everyone. Thankfully, Optum and other health system stakeholders are implementing individualized care solutions, leveraging compassionate case management, technology, and data. It becomes possible to deliver better care tailored to the whole person. In a year-long investigation, Optum and Washington Post Brand Studio laid out the challenges facing the system and what that means for patients who are in need of care. We also documented how leaders like Optum are pioneering innovations and advancing big ideas to address these issues and transform the health system to work better for all. In the month of July, our House Calls Division, for example, did over 200,000 house call visits to meet our most vulnerable patients. To capture the importance of finding cohesive care, we embarked on a three-part documentary series digging deep into the health journeys of real people. Scott, whose chronic condition requires regular monitoring and costly medications, found help through in-home infusion services and a portal that connects his prescriptions directly with his doctors and billing. Nancy, a cancer survivor who is initially misdiagnosed, got the right treatment thanks to a cancer nurse care manager. Andor Lin, a polychronic patient with a myriad of conditions, is supported by a complex case manager who tracks her vitals using digital tools and helps her connect with specialists. We went even deeper on the topic through interactive investigative journalism that featured subject matter experts at Optum who explained the range of solutions from digital technologies to personalized services that are helping providers deliver whole-person care. And what we want to do is string all of those pieces together to provide a holistic, digitally-enabled care experience that gets to that aspect of whole-person care. While there is still a long way to go to build a fully connected system, this investigation illuminates how healthcare leaders are embracing new ideas, collaboration, and technologies to build a more unified, responsive, and effective health system that improves care one person at a time.