Federal regulators have barred three Medicare health plans operated by UnitedHealth and another owned by Anthem from enrolling new members next year because they didn’t spend the minimum amount required on medical benefits.
Private Medicare health plans are required to spend a certain threshold of their premium revenue on medical claims. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services determined that the plans didn’t hit the required 85% level for three years in a row, prompting the sanctions, according to letters dated Sept. 2 and
The plans cover about 83,000 UnitedHealth members and about 1,200 Anthem members, according to federal data. That represents only tiny fractions of the companies’ overall enrollment in Medicare, the federal healthcare program for seniors.
Read more:
The penalties apply to UnitedHealthcare Medicare plans in
A fourth plan operated by the Puerto Rico-based
CMS also
Read more:
The penalties for UnitedHealth’s plans were
Pandemic deferrals
UnitedHealth said the COVID-19 pandemic led to some members deferring medical care, leading to it miss the threshold in a handful of markets.
“UnitedHealthcare spends at least 85% of the premiums we take in on care for the people we serve,” company spokesman Eric Hausman said in an email. “In a few markets, we were not able to do that because so many of our members deferred going to get care due to COVID-19.”
Existing members won’t be affected and the company offers other plan options in those markets, Hausman said.
Read more:
“Anthem's top priority is the health and wellbeing of consumers enrolled in our affiliated health plan,” spokesman Hieu Nguyen said in an email. The CMS action doesn’t affect MMM Healthcare’s other Medicare plan or any other Anthem plan, he said, and the companies will work to address the agency’s concerns.
Representatives for Triple-S didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.
Private Medicare plans are an increasingly important part of health insurers’ business. The pandemic has disrupted typical patterns of medical care. As COVID cases increased, patients pulled back on more routine visits, a dynamic that generally more than offset the increased costs of COVID-related care.