This week, health insurance Centene announced that it is meeting its profit targets in the ACA marketplace. That's in marked contrast to United Healthcare, which expects to have lost a billion dollars in the marketplace by year's end -- and is withdrawing most of its offerings there in 2017.
I've previously noted that Centene is primarily a managed Medicaid company and has acted like one in the marketplace, fielding plans with low premiums, high deductibles and narrow networks. UHC, the nation's largest provider of employer-sponsored plans, put up more robust networks at higher prices in large markets.
While the contrast seems clean, there's more to the story. UHC is also a major managed Medicaid provider, and in many smaller markets its plans are price competitive. That's the case in most of Iowa, from whence it is nonetheless withdrawing. In a post on healthinsurance.org, I examine why that might be -- and wonder why, more broadly, UHC is withdrawing most of its marketplace offerings, instead of replicating the low-cost narrow network model.
I've previously noted that Centene is primarily a managed Medicaid company and has acted like one in the marketplace, fielding plans with low premiums, high deductibles and narrow networks. UHC, the nation's largest provider of employer-sponsored plans, put up more robust networks at higher prices in large markets.
While the contrast seems clean, there's more to the story. UHC is also a major managed Medicaid provider, and in many smaller markets its plans are price competitive. That's the case in most of Iowa, from whence it is nonetheless withdrawing. In a post on healthinsurance.org, I examine why that might be -- and wonder why, more broadly, UHC is withdrawing most of its marketplace offerings, instead of replicating the low-cost narrow network model.