Insurance

Two RRGs Instrumental in New Education Program

Two risk retention groups have joined forces with a healthcare research group to create a new course of study for risk management in senior care, a specialty that did not exist before.

Published in The Risk Retention Reporter, December 2010. Click here to download the article.

Vermont Regulator Plans New RRG Reinsurance Regulations

Vermont’s Captive Insurance Division is planning new regulations that would make it the first state to adopt the National Association of Insurance Commissioners’ (NAIC) model risk retention group guidelines for reinsurance. The division regulates about 30% of the nation’s active RRGs...

This article was published in The Risk Retention Reporter in September 2010. Copies are available to prospective clients on request.

Enrollment Growth, Consolidation Continue in Florida Medicare Advantage Market

Managed Medicare enrollment in Florida continues to grow at a fast pace. Statewide membership in Medicare Advantage (MA) plans now tops 1 million, up 12.7% from the number enrolled in April 2009. Penetration stands at 32%, up 3% from last year, as the pool of Medicare eligibles has grown at a slower rate than enrollment. Despite the addition of two new companies offering MA plans in the state, market consolidation observed in recent years also has continued as some companies scale back their plan offerings and discontinue coverage for out-of-state workers. 

This article was published in Medicare Business Online in May 2010. Copies are available to prospective clients on request.

Enrollment, Penetration Increase in Fast-Paced California Medicare Advantage Market

 

Competition in the California Medicare Advantage market continues to run at a fast pace. While some firms are eliminating products and plans, others are expanding their service areas and new plans are starting up. Enrollment continues to increase as companies step in to capitalize on the opportunities that come with change, and statewide MA enrollment was above 1.66 million on March 1, 2010. The pace of growth – 4.6% since March 2009 – slowed a bit from the previous year’s 5.7% rate, but even so, penetration increased to 35.5% as enrollment growth exceeded growth in the state’s Medicare population.

This report was published in Medicare Business Online in April 2010. Copies are available to prospective clients on request.

 

Health Plans See Growth in Medicaid

As healthcare costs continue to climb and the slow U.S. economy pushes more people into medical assistance programs, states are increasing their use of care management strategies to help rein in costly Medicaid programs. A new analysis by Mark Farrah Associates (MFA), a leading data aggregator and publisher of health plan market data, confirms U.S. enrollment in managed Medicaid plans is on the rise. Total membership grew by 9.7% from June 2008 to September 2009, reaching more than 23 million.

The growth rate in Medicaid managed care plans is even stronger than the increase in total Medicaid enrollment, estimated recently at 7.5% from mid-2008 to mid-2009. Both statistics demonstrate a growing opportunity for health plans seeking to replace business lost in employer groups.

This Healthcare Business Strategy brief presents preliminary results of MFA’s Medicaid segment analysis project and discusses how states and health plans are approaching this market.

Click here to read the brief.

 

 

Low Penetration, Hot Competition for MA Companies in Suburban New Jersey

New Jersey is a largely suburban state with most of its population living in the New York and Philadelphia metropolitan areas. The hottest Medicare Advantage (MA) competition is in suburban New York City, where penetration is only about 12% and the state’s leading MA companies – Aetna, Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey, and UnitedHealth – are waging a battle for members.

This article was published in Medicare Business Online on March 19, 2010. Copies are available to prospective clients on request.

Provider Contracting, Not Competition, Is MA Challenge in Alaska

 

Alaska is a state of contrasts. With fewer than 700,000 residents spread out over 663,000 square miles, it is the biggest but least densely populated of the 50 United States. Ranking 47th in population, it is one of five states with uninsured rates above 20%. Its cost of living and per capita healthcare costs are among the highest in the country, and its number of private physicians per 1,000 residents is among the lowest in the United States. It has the smallest percentage of total population enrolled in Medicare, 9%, and the lowest Medicare Advantage (MA) penetration rate, 0.6%.

This article was published in February 2010 in Medicare Business Online in a series of briefs on state competition among managed Medicare plans. The challenge in preparing this brief was discussing the lack of competition in this market.

Copies of the brief are available to prospective clients on request.

 

 

Local Blues Plan Complicates Medicare Advantage Market in North Carolina

At first glance, Medicare Advantage (MA) competition in North Carolina appears to be split between urban and rural markets, with the nation’s top MA company, UnitedHealth, leading in the cities and second-ranked Humana ahead in the rural areas. However, the statewide market picture is complicated by Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina, which competes strongly in the Triad cities of the northern Piedmont, North Carolina’s largest MA market, and runs a close third in metropolitan Charlotte, the state’s largest urban area.

This article was published in Medicare Business Online on January 15, 2010. Copies are available to prospective clients on request.

Nevada MA Competition Largely a National Affair Since UnitedHealth-Sierra Merger

Looking at Medicare Advantage (MA) competition in Nevada today as compared with two years ago, one might think that not much has changed since the merger of Sierra Health Services and UnitedHealth Group in early 2008. Now, as then, two companies control the lion’s share of the market (although the names of the top companies have changed). However, a thorough analysis finds significant differences between market conditions now and two years ago.

This article was published in Medicare Business Online on December 30, 2009. Copies are available to prospective clients on request.

Local Companies Dominate MA Competition in Massachusetts

Competition among managed Medicare plans in Massachusetts is largely a local affair. Nearly 90% of all Medicare Advantage (MA) members are served by companies based in the commonwealth. The four companies with the highest enrollment are all Massachusetts-based, non-profit organizations. Three of the four – Tufts Associated Health Plans, Fallon Community Health Plan, and Harvard Pilgrim Health Care – got their starts in connection with local medical schools and health care providers.

This article was published in Medicare Business Online on November 16, 2009. Prospective clients may request a copy by using the form on the Contact page.

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