Humana’s cautious defense of the Medicare Advantage program


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Humana is the second largest Medicare Advantage insurer in the country. But during the company’s annual investor day on Monday, Humana was the program’s No. 1 defender.

Over the course of the four-hour event, Humana laid out a vociferous defense of the privatized Medicare plans, which are popular among seniors but face rising calls for reform amid evidence major insurers are gaming the program to pad their bottom line.

MA is misunderstood, Humana’s executives said. Its much-maligned payment structure incentivizes insurers to better coordinate care, leading to better outcomes. It saves seniors and taxpayers money, they said.

MA, in which the government contracts private payers to manage the care of Medicare seniors, has grown to cover more than half of all members in the federal insurance scheme. Historically, it’s enjoyed broad bipartisan support.

But the outlook on the privatized Medicare alternative has soured over the past few years, amid growing attention to bad behavior in MA as Republicans in Washington look to curb waste, fraud and abuse in federal programs.

Yet MA is essentially untouchable because of its support among reliable senior voters, according to Humana executives.

And concerns about controversial payer practices meant to prevent cherry-picking of healthier members, catch diagnoses earlier and control costs are overblown, Humana CEO Jim Rechtin argued — though, he allowed that there are ways they could be improved.

“Risk adjustment and home assessments and prior authorizations have become dirty words. And they should not be dirty words,” Rechtin said. “These are great clinical tools. And we’re going to defend them all day long … But we need to do it responsibly.”

Shielding the status quo — mostly

Humana, which covers 6 million members in MA, has a significant financial incentive to protect the program from major changes. The privatized Medicare plans accounted for $24.1 billion of its $27.8 billion in total premiums last year.

But the insurer has struggled to maintain profits amid headwinds in the program, including higher medical costs and unfavorable regulatory updates that have tamped down on reimbursement.

And stocks in major MA payers have been on the decline amid a slew of recent research and media reports drawing attention to insurers’ business practices that critics say excessively delay or deny care for members and improperly inflate payments from the government by billions of dollars each year.

For example, the CMS will pay MA insurers $84 billion more this year than it would have if those members had been in traditional Medicare, according to influential congressional advisory group MedPAC. Many of these overpayments were driven by upcoding, in which MA payers game diagnosis codes to exaggerate the health needs of their members — nabbing higher payments from the government along the way.

Home assessments, wherein MA payers send a nurse or other clinician to visit a patient in their home, are one problematic area. Such visits generate billions of inflated revenue for MA payers by allowing them to capture more diagnoses, according to a Wall Street Journal investigation of Medicare Advantage practices.

Insurers say the at-home checks help them treat seniors in a more convenient and comfortable setting, and identify any additional needs that might go unnoticed at a doctor’s visit.

It’s been talked about quite a bit that these annual wellness visits may not be a good thing. That’s not true. Our annual wellness visits, the at-home visits, are loved by our seniors,” said George Renaudin, Humana’s insurance president.

But earlier this month, the WSJ reported that Humana supports new limits on payments from diagnoses recorded by nurse practitioners during home visits that aren’t supported by other patient records.

“What we’re not going to be investing dollars in is chasing diagnosis codes that don’t drive the system to a better place,” Rechtin said.

Similarly, though prior authorization is necessary to ensure providers give only the most up-to-date and relevant clinical care, “we do know that the prior authorization process does create friction,” Renaudin said. 

Renaudin said Humana was “working hard” to reduce that friction by removing codes that don’t require Humana’s greenlight and automating prior authorization determinations.

Despite a full-court press from insurers to prevent meaningful reform, regulators and lawmakers in Washington have taken notice of concerns about MA.



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