Healthcare Hypocrite of the Week: Aetna’s Mark Bertolini

http://medcitynews.com/2016/08/hypocrite-aetna-mark-bertolini/?utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=33097793&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-8tHuz1OyW0jad1rYHbmCrWm51PA21pdsKB9af25xlqpvHnWr2o1T0b7LutMzmXzy521UtBFmUcZw75t8pNJcQYSG5Uvw&_hsmi=33097793

Mark Bertolini

Mark Bertolini, CEO of Aetna

It’s only Thursday, but it’s probably safe to announce that the winner of Healthcare Hypocrite of the Week is Aetna Chairman and CEO Mark Bertolini. And it’s not because Elizabeth Holmes and Martin Shkreli have managed to stay out of the news for a while.

Despite calling the Affordable Care Act business a “good investment” as recently as April, Bertolini has decided to pull Aetna out of most of the public health insurance exchanges. Initially, he cited the ACA risk pools as being unsustainable — in other words, too many old people with chronic illnesses and not enough young and spry customers to mitigate the risk. But as it turns out his actions may have been prompted by a desire to get even when the insurer didn’t get its way on a business deal.

On Monday, Aetna announced that it was pulling out of public individual insurance exchanges in all but four states. For the 2017 plan year, the Hartford, Connecticut-based insurer will only participate in the exchanges in 252 counties in Delaware, Iowa, Nebraska and Virginia. The reason? The company said it lost $200 million on individual plans in the second quarter and $430 million since the Obamacare insurance mandate took effect in 2014.

Battle of the bulls: Aetna threatened ACA participation over Humana merger blockage

http://www.healthcaredive.com/news/battle-of-the-bulls-aetna-threatened-aca-participation-over-humana-merger/424640/

  • In July, Aetna sent a letter to the Justice Department insinuating it would leave the ACA market if its pending merger with Humana was blocked by the DOJ, The Huffington Post reported.
  • Aetna announced late Monday it was exiting nearly 70% of the ACA markets it participated in next year (parsing down 778 counties to 242).
  • On Monday, CEO Mark Bertolini cited losses in the millions as the reason for the decision. However, the July letter obtained by The Huffington Post implies the decision was more influenced by the Justice Department lawsuit.

Transgender bias case against Dignity Health could set off religious freedom clash

http://www.modernhealthcare.com/article/20160810/NEWS/160809895?utm_campaign=CHL:%20Daily%20Edition&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=32861909&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-9qL_IaEO7Hx72W4SFvgvo0t4dNzK_5X_TSeG2I4XooJHczu-Qvacm_omfrbvDQpoiVRLJqkyM8MICvHlogoy3wIWsUEA&_hsmi=32861909

Dignity Health has answered a federal discrimination lawsuit filed by a transgender nurse by arguing that civil rights law does not require its self-insured employer health plan to cover gender reassignment-related care. It says Title VII of the Civil Rights Act does not cover transgender status as a protected classification.

The San Francisco-based hospital chain also argued last month in response to the closely watched suit—one of the first of its kind in the country—that HHS’ May rule barring categorical exclusion of coverage for gender transition services does not take effect until Jan. 1, 2017. Prior to that, it argues, federal law does not require an employer to provide health coverage for “sex transformation” treatment.

In addition, the new federal anti-bias rule does not bar self-insured employer health plans from excluding benefits for services that are not medically necessary, according to Dignity’s motion for dismissal. It said “the medical efficacy of sex transformation surgery remains the subject of debate.”

But lawyers for the American Civil Liberties Union who are representing nurse Josef Robinson say both Title VII and the new HHS rule interpreting Section 1557of the Affordable Care Act clearly require employers and health plans to cover treatment related to gender dysphoria. That’s the name for the condition where people feel they are not the gender they were assigned at birth.

Legal experts expect more such lawsuits following HHS’ issuance of the anti-bias rule in May.

Ex-CFO: Sonoma West Medical Center benefactor said ‘cook the books’

http://www.pressdemocrat.com/news/5929800-181/ex-cfo-sonoma-west-medical-center?utm_campaign=CHL%3A+Daily+Edition&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=32551462&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-9clPt83wEDUurMMpqyDM1dyAp7deut55DqYuzz1P4pNgxjkcuDVhbiSnVGG5xFKGPT-_yQSR7_csUpx_FO377us5sVdQ&_hsmi=32551462

The former chief financial officer at Sonoma West Medical Center said a key hospital benefactor asked him to “falsely portray” the hospital’s finances to show positive net profit for the hospital, according to a whistleblower lawsuit filed this week.

The lawsuit against Sonoma West Medical Center was filed Monday by Douglas Goldfarb, who served as chief financial officer from Nov. 30, 2015 to June 6, 2016. It is the latest legal complaint against the embattled hospital, one that echoes charges made in a lawsuit filed two months ago by the hospital’s former chief nursing officer, Cheri AnDra.

As Sonoma West Medical Center officials said with AnDra’s lawsuit, they could not comment on the legal challenge because it involved personnel matters. Both Goldfarb and AnDra are represented by the same Bay Area attorney, Daniel Bartley.

The suits allege millionaire west county software entrepreneur Dan Smith, the hospital’s largest donor and most consistent financial supporter, is using the hospital as a testing ground for his “defective” tablet-based electronic medical records system called HarmoniMD.

Judge: Only time for one insurer merger case in 2016

http://www.fiercehealthcare.com/payer/judge-only-time-for-one-insurer-merger-case-2016?utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal&mrkid=959610&mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiWldRd1kyUXpNalUwWXpFeCIsInQiOiJaWkJVWkdKWG9DSFJwYytCZmVHV1JKcFhVd1lZbUlHS1JjZTZHZWI2ZDl3dU1XNU5oTWpCY3lSU3BYaWtyZXVyeGZmbDdyTVFHWk5OQUhEQzhlZkdlNm9lTnE3Y2M2elhcLzRrN3F5aXFKXC9RPSJ9

A federal judge said Thursday it is unlikely he would be able to rule on both the Aetna-Humana and Anthem-Cigna antitrust suits by the end of the year, according to Reuters.

Lawyers from Anthem and Aetna argued this week that Judge John Bates should hear their cases before the end of 2016. The Justice Department filed suits in July against both mergers, citing competition concerns that it says would increase prices for consumers and stunt innovation.

Bates said in a hearing Thursday that both requests cannot be fulfilled, but did not say which case would be sent for reassignment.

“That’s my determination: that I can’t do both,” Bates said in the hearing, according to Reuters.

Aetna believes it has a simpler case, the article adds. Further, its deal with Humana was announced first.

Anthem’s lawyers, though, point out that if the case is not settled by the end of the year, Cigna will likely refuse to extend their agreement, thus dooming the merger, Reuters notes.

In an interview with FierceHealthPayer, antitrust lawyer David Balto indicated that the Anthem-Cigna merger is “like climbing Mount Everest,” and that they are less poised to battle the DOJ than Aetna and Humana.

Tenet Healthcare agrees to plead guilty in Atlanta kickback scheme, will pay $514 million

http://www.bizjournals.com/atlanta/news/2016/08/01/tenet-healthcare-agrees-to-plead-guilty-in-atlanta.html

Atlanta Medical Center, previously one of Tenet Healthcare’s Georgia hospitals, was involved in the scheme.

Tenet Healthcare Corp. (NYSE: THC) said Monday that it believes it has reached an agreement in principle with the government to resolve a long-running criminal investigation and civil litigation about a kick-back scandal involving an Atlanta medical clinic and three of the company’s Atlanta-area hospitals.

Dallas-based Tenet said it has agreed to pay $514 million, has agreed to the appointment by the U.S. Department of Justice of a corporate monitor for a period of three years, and has agreed for two wholly owned subsidiaries that previously operated Atlanta Medical Center and North Fulton Hospital to each plead guilty to a single-count indictment. The settlement will be with the U.S. Department of Justice, the U.S. Attorneys’ Offices for the Northern and Middle Districts of Georgia, and the Georgia Attorney General’s Office.

“The agreement in principle contemplates, among other things, payment by the company of $513,788,345, which is comprised of a civil monetary payment of $368,000,000 and a criminal monetary payment of $145,788,345,” Tenet reported Monday.

The company’s two subsidiaries will plead guilty to a single count of conspiracy to violate the federal anti-kickback statute and defraud the United States, Tenet reported.

Hospital Chain’s CEO Faces Lawsuit Over Business Practices

http://www.wsj.com/articles/hospital-chains-ceo-faces-lawsuit-over-business-practices-1470021573

Prem Reddy, head of Prime Healthcare, is known for his aggressive turnaround strategies.

Anthem’s Good, Bad and Ugly News

http://www.bloomberg.com/gadfly/articles/2016-07-27/anthem-earnings-the-good-the-bad-and-the-ugly?_hsenc=p2ANqtz-9r6DeQcVMyNnafhqaWRYPxsGcyFkKJ80w17xLndiqVNIIOrCFlnm-c4sSm8WS6EqhbFxAmVmQuwhj1GdEe1f5nt4irUw&_hsmi=32205122&utm_campaign=KHN%3A+Daily+Health+Policy+Report&utm_content=32205122&utm_medium=email&utm_source=hs_email

Anthem had some good headlines on Wednesday. The insurer reported second-quarter earnings and revenue that topped estimates, with the latter jumping 7.2 percent from a year earlier. It expects to insure more people than it initially forecast this year, after surprisingly robust growth in its Medicaid business.

But beneath the good, there was also bad and ugly.

Two Washington State hospitals liable for failure to provide charity care

http://www.fiercehealthcare.com/finance/two-washington-state-hospitals-found-liable-for-not-providing-patients-charity-care?utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal&mrkid=959610&mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiTm1VMU5HUmlOakEzTWpVMyIsInQiOiI5XC9mUGloUlREa3Rtam9UaXdnaG0zeXZlWitYYVRuR3R3eFAzMDc1WWFURHlZMVBcL005SG42T2IwY2FhOFY0MFJDYzFHSGpDTmRQVkVqWXE3TTRORFEyNlpBdDFUR2k2N3RaNXNBdkh0NXJnPSJ9

moneymoney

http://www.yakimaherald.com/news/local/judge-finds-regional-toppenish-hospitals-violated-consumer-protection-act-on/article_21459f38-4d0f-11e6-a8b0-67526764c546.html

DOJ sues to block Aetna-Humana, Anthem-Cigna mergers

http://www.fiercehealthcare.com/payer/doj-sues-to-block-aetna-humana-anthem-cigna-mergers?utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal&mrkid=959610&mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiWkRFMk5ERTBOemd5TkRZMyIsInQiOiJiaEZQV3RZeFFXVUR5TFwvTDhmd2JBc2ppRzVpRjY3eDN5b1Q1aXh3aHV5VDdud2xpblFBME92bkl2ZFQ2NXZOZ1BEZ3BqSkZ2Y2NGUDA2aG5laE5JMzhIeTJ4UWNuckxkUkI0bVwvdFRyM3o0PSJ9

Justice Department building inscriptionJustice Department building inscription