UnitedHealth Sets Dates for Restoring Change Healthcare Systems

  • Mar 08, 2024

    UnitedHealth Group faces a crisis as the fallout from the hack of its Change Healthcare subsidiary continues to spread. The firm is rumored to have paid $22 million to the hackers who may have caused the breach, even as it faces falling stock prices, federal actions to stabilize provider reimbursement, payer operations disrupted by the hack, and legal risk.  

    A civil suit has already been filed against UnitedHealth due to the cyberattack, and the scale of the disruption may strengthen enforcement action resulting from a newly revealed federal antitrust investigation into UnitedHealth. Because of the cyberattack, payments to thousands of providers have stalled, causing a liquidity crisis for some practices. The hack also may have exposed thousands of other health care entities to data breaches. UnitedHealth’s stock price dropped from $521.97 on Feb. 21 (the day the breach was disclosed) to $478.78 at the close of business on March 7.  

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  • Peter Johnson

    Peter has worked as a journalist since 2011 and has covered health care since 2020. At AIS Health, Peter covers trends in finance, business and policy that affect the health insurance and pharma sectors. For Health Plan Weekly, he covers all aspects of the U.S. health insurance sector, including employer-sponsored insurance, Medicaid managed care, Medicare Advantage and the Affordable Care Act individual marketplaces. In Radar on Drug Benefits, Peter covers the operations of (and conflicts between) pharmacy benefit managers and pharmaceutical manufacturers, with a particular focus on pricing dynamics and market access. Before joining AIS Health, Peter covered transportation, public safety and local government for various outlets in Seattle, his hometown and current place of residence. He graduated with a B.A. from Colby College.

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