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Today's Top News
Health Insurers Sacrifice Americans for Profit
Three of the biggest health insurers have announced quarterly earnings in the past few days. If Americans were able to eavesdrop on what executives from those firms tell their Wall Street masters every three months, they would have a better understanding of why premiums keep going up while the number of people with medical coverage keeps going down. 
It only takes three words, when you get right down to it, to describe the real of those folks: profits over people.
CIGNA and Humana are scheduled to report earnings this week. The three companies that have already spoken -- UnitedHealth, WellPoint and Aetna -- earned a combined $2.51 billion from April through the end of June, more than analysts expected. On a per share basis, their earnings were up more than 17 percent on average compared with the second quarter of 2010.
Those results were no anomaly. The big for-profit health insurers have been blowing analysts’ expectations out of the water for several quarters in a row, even as the country struggles to recover from the recession and the number of Americans without coverage -- one out of every six of us -- continues to rise.
Based on their strong performance during the first half of this year, UnitedHealth, WellPoint and Aetna have all have raised their profit forecast for 2011. In other words, they expect to earn far more this year than last year and far more than even the most hopeful investors and analysts had anticipated.
This has made Wall Street very happy indeed, as reflected in the breathtaking increase in the companies’ share prices over the past year. Since the end of July 2010, investors have bid up the stock by more than 50 percent at four of the big five. WellPoint, the laggard, saw its stock price increase by a still-impressive 35 percent.
One of the secrets to achieving these results is what the insurers euphemistically call “medical management.” That often translates into denied claims and denied coverage for doctor-ordered care. The fewer claims you pay and the more procedures you refuse to pay for, the moremoney is left over for investors to put in their pockets.
Another important way they’ve been able to sustain such a string of impressive earnings results is to shift more and more of the cost of care to their policyholders. An increasing percentage of these companies’ policyholders are enrolled in plans that require greater cost sharing. Those policyholders pay more for care out of their own pockets than ever before while their insurers are paying much less.
The insurers are loathe to admit this, and have been making up a host of incredible excuses to explain why they are paying so much less for care than investors and analysts had expected and so much less on a percentage basis than in previous years.
Unending Excuses to Duck the Truth
At the end of 2010, executives told Wall Street that the “utilization” of medical services was lower than in 2009 because the flu season last year was less severe. They assured investors utilization would return to more normal levels during the first quarter of 2011.
When it didn’t, the bad winter weather was to blame. Insurance executives wanted us to believe that people were not getting the care they needed because it was colder and snowier than usual. They assured us that medical spending would jump again as soon as the weather improved and the ice and snow melted.
Surprise! It’s August and people are still not going to the doctor or picking up their prescriptions or checking into the hospital as much as they usually do.
And what’s the excuse this time? It’s the economy, they say -- even though the recession officially ended more than a year ago. At least UnitedHealth’s executives ackowledged that, as AP reported, “health plans that make patients more aware of the cost of care may be having an impact.”
May be? Give me a break. And stop the double-speak. What we’re so aware of is that we’re simply unable to get the care we need because of the often sky-high deductibles of today’s health plans, which insurers mislabel “consumer-driven.”
Insurers' Code Words
Insurance industry executives are experts at talking in code, which makes it difficult to understand just how much they value profits over people. Occasionally, though, they slip up, as Aetna’s chieffinancial officer, Joseph Zubretsky, did last Wednesday during his company’s conference call with analysts.
Clearly concerned that investors might think Aetna was willing to grow by adding people to its rolls who might have substantial medical needs, Zubretsky disabused Wall Street of that notion.
“We would like to have both profit and growth, but if you have to choose between one or the other, you take margin and profit and you sacrifice the growth line,” Zubretsky said.
Whether he knew it or not, he was channeling WellPoint CEO Angela Braley. In a 2008 conference call with financial analysts, Braley had to acknowledge that her company had spent more on medical care during the previous three months than she and Wall Street had expected.
In the future, she promised, “We will not sacrifice profitability for membership.”
That was exactly what Wall Street wanted to hear.
WellPoint and Aetna and other insurers have demonstrated repeatedly that while they will do all they can to avoid sacrificing profitability for membership, they are quite willing to sacrifice their members -- and the American public -- for profits.
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27 Comments so far
Show AllHumana's earnings were way up. But this is why we need Universal, Single Payer Healthcare like real democracies everywhere. Even some dictatorships also.
Mr. Potter - what part of capitalism don't you understand?
Insurance and drug company profits will soar higher in 2014 when Obamacare's enhanced corporate welfare components kick in
I too believe in a single payer system or at least a nonprofit option, but The Affordable health care law does force the for profit thieves to spend eighty percent of premium revenue on claims. At this point in time just as many people in America die each month from the lack of health care as died at 911 or Americans deaths in Iraq each and every month. At least the Affordable health care law is a start to bringing some attention to our health care problems, tax the rich and wall street, make the bastards that created our problems pay for health care. Fox news lies, where are the jobs?
"but The Affordable health care law does force the for profit thieves to spend eighty percent of premium revenue on claims."
Let me guess -- you think this is a good thing? All it means is that premiums can be jacked up into the stratosphere, thus making that 80% easier to pay out . . . and it's also contingent on a remarkably squishy definition of "claims."
Is that a serious question? Mr. Potter obviously understands capitalism better than all the members of Congress who voted for that deficit reduction Plan to Destroy the Social Safety Net While Enhancing Profits for the Corporate Sector this week.
I suppose it would be politically incorrect to refer to the Amerikan health insurers as an industry full of little Eichmans, so I wont.
Good call, NC-Tom.
It's a good way to get fired from a tenured teaching position in Amerika, if you happen to have one.
I can't afford health insurance so i don't have it. I am one the lucky ones the way they manage Health Insurance to day, you may be better off to put your money in the bank an let it draw interest.The main benefit is the fact I don't have a Doctor pumping me full of Drugs with side effects, that cause more damage to body in the long term than the Illness they are suppose to treat. Then theres all those unnecessary Tests.Besides if life becomes to unbareable I'll just take some money out my savings account and pay someone to shot me.
Oh, it's not like you'd have to pay anyone. Just buy a fairly authentic-looking toy gun and point it at a cop, particulalry in an impoverished, edgy area. Suicide by cop.
The medical industrial complex is one of the most disgusting outgrowths of capitalism, although there are plenty to choose from for that award.
No, no, no! If you kill yourself in a fashion that the coroner declares suicide then your heirs will not collect on any life insurance that you may have. If you kill your self by the police the insurance companies won't pay out because you were committing a crime. Ya gotta learn to play the game.
I've figured out that when the time comes, so as to not be a burden, I'll have a doc write me a scip for some good pain meds, maybe some valium so I can "sleep"-no not overdose as that would be suicide-but enough to make me good and numb. Then I plan on going fishing in the wintertime when it's below freezing as I do every year, or maybe at that point, once more for old times sake. I'll accidently fall into the river because by that point "I might be a little weaker than normal". Then if I can get out I will then "attempt" to make it back to camp all the while stripping off my clothes (which is what many hypothermic victims do) so that I may go out of this world in the same fashion I came in-buck naked. They'll find my frozen icicle of an ass somewhere in the woods, if the coydogs or vultures don't get to me first. Coroner rules death by accidental hypothermia and insurance companies pay. My last act to stick it to the man!
OYE
peacekeepertwo - I agree that we'd probably be better off paying our own savings account a monthly insurance premium payment, and use it for any health care we might need. But as for letting that savings draw interest???!! The only thing savings accounts sitting in banks have been drawing for longer than I can recall is dust mites - or mildew, depending on what part of the country you live in. Only extra cash transactions in banks any more is all the fees they dump on you for every little thing they can think up to charge you for, just for having your money sitting in their bank. I'm surprised they haven't come up with a monthly rent on it yet.
Here is a new one from Chase. They will charge you a dollar for 1=3 days if you use your debit card at the pump. Here is the quote from their email
"
Thank you for using your Chase Debit Card. You have used your debit card for "pay at the pump" gasoline transactions and we want to make you aware of a change in how we process these purchases beginning July 17.
Before you fill up your tank, you are asked to swipe your debit card to authorize your purchase. When you do this, a "placeholder" of $1 is charged to your account, which is then changed to the actual purchase amount after the merchant submits the transaction.
For example: If your gasoline purchase is $22.50, then that amount will be paid to the merchant and posted to your account. However, you may see a $1 charge in the pending transaction section of your Account Activity page for 1 to 3 days until the merchant submits the actual amount of your purchase. You should always immediately deduct the actual purchase amount from your balance, even though it could take a few days for the money to be taken out of your account.
Previously, you did not see the $1 transaction. But after July 17, 2011, you may notice a pending $1 charge when you check your online Account Activity page at chase.com.
We want to assure you that the $1 authorization amount is not an error. It will be replaced by your actual purchase amount when the merchant submits your transaction. Here is an example of how the pending transaction will look:
They also used to take out $5.00/mt from savings then put it back in the next day. How much money do you think they are making from just those 2 swindles? Plus the charge the merchant x amount to use the debit machines. they are getting deviouser and devioser. Our more criminal and greedy. Fuck them all.
Why do we even need health insurance? It is the same as car insurance. I pay 600 a year for a product I never use.
Just what free market system in the history of the universe can you cite in which people have the power?
This is so ridiculous, just as the post below implies. Your own post reveals your lunacy.
"More Payers is the answer" ... Yes, but then, to be effective, ALL those payers have to be in ONE insurance company. If this company is private then that's a monopoly, and not a free market. If the monopoly is the preferred method then how do the "people" control it?
The best way is if the monopoly is state-owned, and then the "people" have control by the ballot box. Funny...I do not remember being able to vote for ANY of the CEO's of any of the insurance policies I have ever owned.
Is there any more concrete example of the failure of the great American democratic experiment than for-profit health care?
Profits over people? Hell, that's codified in their charters. Spending money on health care defeats the purpose of these companies' existence.
Indeed you are correct. Public companies are legally bound to put their shareholder's interests as paramount. It would be illegal (or at the very least irresponsible) for any for-profit health insurer to do anything other than deny care to its members when profits for shareholders are threatened.
Single Payer is the answer for the country and it would be a boon to business in the U.S. The problem is that our system is such, that we will not have a national health proogam until we have a publicly funded progrm in a state or two. Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis said in the 30s that the states are the laboratories of democracy. Some of us in Ohio are trying (SPANOhio.org) as are groups in other states.If the remaider of the country want to pitch in, contribute $$. It will not come as manna from heaven.
The health insurance fraud is a rotten system. Did you ever wonder why the biggest buildings usually belong to insurance cos?
If we had a decent system, it would be universal health care, including alternative health, with graduated premiums.
As long as the "alternative" care had been proven efficacious in double blind tests I'm happy to have tax money support it.
Otherwise there is the risk that precious health resources are being spent on ineffective treatments while other people's care is delayed, with potentially fatal results.
Maybe what we should all do is a little civil disobedience.
Anyone who is single or who has no children just drop all health insurance. Then, if you get seriously ill, just go to your nearest bank and steal one dollar. If you illness is serious, throw a brick through a post-office window, this will get you a five year sentence and the best state-run medical care you can get outside of an active combat zone.
Not everyone could do this, but some could, and it would only take a small percentage.
We already have death panels, and they are called Health Insurance Companies.
I have insurance thru my wife's employer, considered one of the "best" insurers in the country. What a laugh. I'm getting treatment for a problem now that only a chiropractor can address. My deductible is $3,000, and I will never reach that limit, so I pay for all of it.
See, if I went to a "regular doctor" I'd get meaningless treatment that wouldn't help me at all (I've tried, I know) and the cost would be astronomical, but the insurance would pay for more of it. Including drugs that wouldn't be any help, but the doctors and insurers just love to dispense drugs, for anything. That's where most of the profits are.
My chiropractor uses naturopathic remedies, and of course all that's not "scientific", so it's not covered. But they work far better than all the drugs with crippling side effects and dubious curatives. The more I read about the whole medical/insurance/pharmaceutical industry the more it sounds like the military-industrial-entertainment-technological-media-corporate complex.
I agree, and that is why many insurance companies won't pay for chiros. They have been trying to get natural remedies off the market. Waxman has been doing this for decades. They say there is no FDA approval. Many holistic companies have recently been raided by SWAT teams and shut down. THere is a lot of info at naturalnews.com for this.
The side effects from the drug are incredible. I watched one the other day for psoriasis and it said you could get heart failure or worsening of heart failure if you take it.
And the sheep line up. The harmful anti depressants are so cross illnessed now and the docs keep pushing them I am in a pain clinic and my doc kept telling me about a new drug until I asked him if he or his wife would take it.
You are both adding 2 + 2 and getting something other than 4.
There are two issues here and they should be kept separate.
1). Whether or not the practice of chiropracty (sp) is helpful and if so, for what ailments.
2). Whether or not US doctors are over-prescribing drugs or inappropriately prescribing drugs for the ailments of which you refer.
I think it is pretty clear that many US doctors with insured patients just feed them pills and perform unnecessary tests and procedures. This does not immediately imply that Chiropractors actually have an effective alternative over the placebo effect. It might be hard for many people to accept that doing nothing at all might be better than going to a formal doctor, but this could well be the case. In such an event there is a lot of money being spent on ineffective treatment that might have been better spent on a new relaxation spa for your home...for example.
The "alternative" medicine industry is just as large a monster as the pharmecutical industry and they have the advantage that they do not have to prove their products do anything at all. Indeed, they have even sold dangerous products in the past that can kill (Ephedra) and fought like hell to keep selling poisons even in the face of high-profile deaths. Profits always trump morality in any industry. That is why regulation and enforcement are important.