Health Plan Weekly

  • CVS-Driven Biosimilar Boom Stokes Excitement, Frustration at AMCP Conference

    Since CVS Health Corp. dropped the blockbuster drug Humira (adalimumab) from its national commercial template formularies on April 1, the number of prescriptions written for Humira biosimilars has jumped from just 5% to 36%, according to a recent equity analyst report.  

    Speakers at the Academy of Managed Care Pharmacy (AMCP) conference in New Orleans said the development is encouraging and could change the game for future biosimilars — including those in the pipeline for another immunosuppressive drug, Stelara (ustekinumab). But clinicians speaking at the conference also said that the transition to biosimilars has not always gone smoothly for patients. 

    For example, rheumatologist Mark Box, M.D., said the potential cost savings associated with switching patients to biosimilars compared to the administrative burden on providers “often does not balance.”  

  • ‘Not a Fluff Piece’: AHIP, AMA, NAACOS Offer Actionable Valued-Based Care Tips

    Payers and providers are increasingly adopting value-based care, although they need to continue to invest in the models and collaborate to make them work, according to a report released on April 10 by AHIP, the American Medical Association (AMA) and the National Association of Accountable Care Organizations (NAACOS). The 74-page report identified best practices for developing payment arrangements for value-based care, including establishing clearly defined contract terms and considering ways to incentivize payers and providers to participate and move away from fee-for-service arrangements. 

    “Our goal here — AMA, AHIP and NAACOS — is to identify these real world best practices, get those in the hands of health plans, of physicians and clinicians and the teams in general, the VBC entities, so that they can really absorb this information [and] take action based on it related to their own participation in these models, so that we can really scale this nationwide,” Danielle Lloyd, AHIP’s senior vice president of private market innovations and quality initiatives, said during an April 12 panel discussion at the NAACOS Spring 2024 conference in Baltimore. 

  • UnitedHealth — Mostly — Calms Jittery Analysts With 1Q Earnings Report

    Although UnitedHealth Group is facing a host of headwinds — including responding to a massive cyberattack and managing elevated care utilization — Wall Street analysts largely deemed its first-quarter earnings report on April 16 “better than feared,” albeit with a few asterisks.  

    The cyberattack in question started in February and targeted UnitedHealth’s Change Healthcare division. It significantly disrupted providers’ ability to file claims and receive reimbursement, spurring UnitedHealth to issue short-term loans to some affected providers and temporarily suspend prior authorization for certain services, among other remediation measures.   

  • Elevance Again Beats Utilization Blues, Launches Primary Care PE Deal

    Elevance Health, Inc. posted solid results in the first quarter of 2024 and announced an agreement to build a new primary care-focused provider unit with financing from private equity firm Clayton, Dubilier and Rice LLC (CD&R). Wall Street analysts were positive about the results, praising the firm’s relatively low care utilization — an area where other health insurers have struggled in recent quarters. 

    Elevance has been busy with dealmaking in recent months. The CD&R deal, announced April 15, will see the private equity firm and Elevance combine what a CD&R press release termed “certain care delivery and enablement assets of Elevance Health’s Carelon Health and CD&R portfolio companies, apree health and Millennium Physician Group” into a “payer-agnostic” primary care provider focused on value-based contracting, including for patients covered by commercial insurance. It will serve 1 million patients from its inception. 

  • One Year Into ‘Unwinding,’ 20M People Have Lost Medicaid

    More than 20 million people lost their Medicaid or Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) coverage as of April 11, 2024, according to data released by states and CMS on the Medicaid eligibility redetermination process. Medicaid enrollment peaked at 94.5 million in April 2023, when states were permitted to resume disenrolling people from Medicaid who no longer qualify after a multiyear pause during the COVID-19 public health emergency.

    States have reported Medicaid renewal outcomes for two-thirds of Medicaid/CHIP enrollees, as of April 2024, according to KFF’s Medicaid Enrollment and Unwinding Tracker. Overall, about one-third of enrollees with a completed renewal lost their Medicaid coverage, and 69% of those coverage losses were due to procedural reasons — meaning individuals didn’t return their renewal form within a specific time frame or the state was unable to reach them. Disenrollment rates varied significantly across states, ranging from 57% in Utah to 12% in Maine.

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