Tag: Profits

  • Profit motive among hospitals and group practices poses huge risk to patients

    Profit motive among hospitals and group practices poses huge risk to patients

    This post was originally published on the Health Justice Monitor.

    Recent Changes in Physician Practice Arrangements: Private Practice Dropped to Less Than 50 Percent of Physicians in 2020, AMA Economic and Health Policy Research, May 2021, By Carol K. Kane

    “2020 was the first year in which less than half (49.1 percent) of patient care physicians worked in a private practice—a practice that was wholly owned by physicians. This marks a drop of almost 5 percentage points from 2018, when 54.0 percent of physicians worked in physician-owned practices, and a drop of 11 percentage points since 2012. In 2020, almost 40 percent of physicians worked directly for a hospital or for a practice at least partially owned by a hospital or health system.

    The shift toward larger practice size, which has been ongoing for many years, also appears to have accelerated between 2018 and 2020. The percentage of physicians in practices with at least 50 physicians increased from 14.7 percent in 2018 to 17.2 percent in 2020.

    Fifty percent of physicians were employed, 44.0 percent had an ownership stake in their practice, and 5.8 percent were independent contractors in 2020. The employee percentage was up from 47.4 percent in 2018 and 41.8 percent in 2012.”

    Comment by Steffie Woolhandler and David Himmelstein

    The rapid shift from private practice to employment by large corporate organizations – a shift that’s even more marked among doctors under 40, 70% of whom were employees by 2020 – has important implications for health care reform. Insurers’ profit-seeking is the main threat to the clinical independence of doctors in private practice. But pressure from employers seeking to bolster their bottom line is an additional threat – sometimes the main one – for those whose paycheck comes from a hospital, health system, group practice or private equity firm. Private practitioners lose income if they offer free care to an uninsured patient, open their practice to Medicaid patients who bring scant reimbursement, or advise patients to hold off on undergoing a lucrative procedure. Employed doctors risk losing their jobs for repeated offenses against their organization’s profitability.

    Hence, this latest AMA survey data highlights the importance of eliminating profit incentives that bend clinical priorities in both non-profit and for-profit health care institutions. For-profits should be banned, as Medicare used to do in its home care program. Non-profits should be paid global operating budgets and prohibited from retaining any surpluses or using the money not spent on patients for outrageous executive compensation or profit-based bonuses for employees.

  • Coronavirus: Health insurers celebrate their most profitable year

    Coronavirus: Health insurers celebrate their most profitable year

    As millions of Americans celebrated President Biden’s inauguration, some of my former colleagues in the health insurance industry were quietly celebrating some news of their own: their most profitable year ever.

    That’s right: insurance companies made a fortune during a pandemic.

    Just hours before President Biden took the oath of office, UnitedHealthcare quietly released the news that it had blown away Wall Street’s most optimistic profit expectations for 2020, the year of the worst public health crisis in our lifetime that’s seen more than 400,000 Americans die.

    The company reported that although it insured fewer people in the United States in 2020 than in 2019, it took in $15 billion more in revenues. One of the ways it was able to pull that off? By paying far fewer claims last year than the year before. Again, this was during a pandemic.

    Had it not been for membership gains in its Medicare Advantage and Medicaid plans, UnitedHealth would’ve hemorrhaged even more health plan enrollees. In fact, it covered 1.5 million fewer in individual and employer-sponsored/group plans than in 2019 but made BILLIONS more in profits.

    One reason for the drop in health plan enrollment: millions lost health insurance with their jobs during COVID-19. That isn’t a problem for Big Insurance. I hope President Biden pays close attention to how UnitedHealth and others have made huge profits since the Affordable Care Act was passed.

    Mr. President, you called it a “big f*cking deal” when President Obama signed the ACA into law. It brought insurance to 20 million of the 50 million Americans uninsured at the time and made it illegal for insurers to deny coverage to people with preexisting conditions. But …

    Insurance lobbyists rigged the bill in ways that guaranteed huge profits for years to come. Consider this: when you were sworn in as Vice President in 2009 you could’ve bought a share of UnitedHealth stock for $21.55. When you became president yesterday, that share would cost $350.84.

    No wonder Wall Street loves UnitedHealth and other big health insurers so much. UnitedHealth’s shares alone have increased 1,650% over the past 12 years. How much have American wages increased in that time? Not much. How much have their premiums increased? A lot.

    Meanwhile, tens of millions are still uninsured. Even more are “underinsured” because of absurdly high deductibles insurers charge us before they’ll pay a dime. That’s why so many of us with insurance go bankrupt or turn to GoFundMe to beg for money to pay medical bills.

    Get this: UnitedHealth now makes more than two times as much from government programs like Medicare Advantage and Medicaid, than from its “commercial” customers. Most of its revenue by far is coming from taxpayers than their corporate & individual customers.

    Mr. President, to help people get the care their doctors say they need, investigate this industry and take action to put an end to this outrageous profiteering. We taxpayers are being taken to the cleaners by these companies. I know because I worked for them. Let’s talk.

    This post was originally published on Tarbell.org.

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