Call & Times

Two visions of health care’s future collide in Pittsburgh

Hospital chain, insurer at war for patient base

- By CAROLYN Y. JOHNSON

PITTSBURGH – Two healthcare juggernaut­s are locked in a battle for patients in western Pennsylvan­ia that could foretell the future of American health care.

On one side is UPMC, a health system that built its brand on cutting-edge research and university-affiliated hospitals. On the other is Highmark Health, best known as one of the country’s biggest health insurers.

They could be mirror images of each other, flipped upside down. UPMC started out in the hospital business, then created its own health insurance plan and built a $20 billion-a-year enterprise. Highmark, which reported $18.2 billion in revenue last year, announced in 2011 that it would branch from insurance into hospitals.

In response, UPMC threatened to stop accepting Highmark insurance at its doctors and hospitals. Agreements and state interventi­on smoothed over the divorce, which won’t be complete until next year, but people have had to pick sides: Highmark patients with UPMC doctors have had to switch plans, or switch doctors. UPMC health plan members have to pay out-ofnetwork prices at Highmark’s facilities. In the meantime, people have been bombarded by dueling ad campaigns and endless local news stories about the rift.

The competitiv­e clash has turned Pittsburgh into a testing ground for forces that are transformi­ng health care nationally, as waves of consolidat­ion blur traditiona­l boundaries in the $3.3 trillion health-care system.

Such combinatio­ns are advertised as a path to greater efficienci­es and more-coordinate­d care. But the competitio­n between the two health systems has brought abrupt and painful change to many people in western Pennsylvan­ia.

“I call it ‘the war,’’ said Sue Kerr, 47, a Highmark member with a UPMC doctor who is frustrated by a transition that she says neither company has made easy. “You should consider switching providers, switching insurances - switch this, switch that. I was like, ‘We paid for this.’ “

Kerr was aware of the split, but it was not until she became ill that it truly hit home. Sick with a virus in December, Kerr called her UPMC doctor to ask whether she should go er looking for some kind of opening,” said Martin Gaynor, a former director of the Bureau of Economics at the Federal Trade Commission and a professor at Carnegie Mellon University.

The experiment is far from over, but it is unclear whether the combinatio­ns have delivered their promised results.

Pittsburgh’s premiums for employer-sponsored health care are below the national average, but that was also true before the head-tohead competitio­n began, according to a national survey of medical expenditur­es taken by the federal government.

Meanwhile, medical spending per person in Pittsburgh grew 20 percent from 2012 to 2016, faster than the 15 percent growth nationally, the Health Care Cost Institute found, in an analysis of data from national employer-sponsored insurance plans.

Linda Blumberg, a senior fellow at the Urban Institute, said that if the dynamic between the two systems were truly creating efficienci­es to bend the cost curve, she would expect the trend in Pittsburgh to deviate from the rest of the country.

“That’s just not the case,” Blumberg said in an email.

The fight broke into the open in 2011, when Highmark, facing a request for a big rate increase from UPMC, announced that it would ac- ecutive Jeffrey Romoff is building an empire.

“There’s nothing in health care, that we know of, that UPMC doesn’t have an entry into that marketplac­e,” he said, comparing UPMC to the tech giant Amazon.

Late last year, Romoff unveiled plans to invest $2 billion in three downtown specialty hospitals that will push the cutting edge of medical research and care in areas such as cancer treatment, vision restoratio­n and transplant­s.

In Bakery Square, Pittsburgh’s innovation district, UPMC employs 200 software engineers, designers, business analysts and others to develop and commercial­ize new health technologi­es. When Romoff sees a drug company shell out $11.9 billion for a groundbrea­king cancer therapy, as Gilead Sciences did, he thinks UPMC should invent the next one.

Branching from a provider of care into a health insurer has given UPMC control of its fate, Romoff says, instead of leaving an elite hospital system in the vise of a powerful insurer.

Having a large health plan gives the hospital a new incentive to avoid expensive care that is not best for the patient, since the hospital’s income is the health plan’s outlay.

Across town, at a slightly lower skyscraper is Highmark, where chief executive David Holmberg kins Medicine.

The vision of how to shift care out of expensive hospitals is evident in an expansive “health and wellness pavilion” in the suburb of Wexford, where a greeter in the lobby begins the admission process on an iPad.

From there, patients are directed to primary care, outpatient surgery, cancer or other services. Highmark is building a hospital next door and will put the urgent care next to the emergency department, so that people with less serious problems can be directed to a lower-cost site of care.

Both executives identify the same goal – delivering high-quality, affordable care. They say the competitio­n between their companies has been good for the region.

Holmberg says that if Highmark had not stepped in to save Allegheny Health Network, health-care costs would have skyrockete­d as UPMC’s dominance grew.

“In the midst of it, it was disruptive. ‘Oh, they were at each other’s throats’ – and that’s the way it appeared,” Romoff said. “But that’s what disruption is about. And let’s be clear about this: Without disruption, change is much, much slower.”

After years of warring ad campaigns and alarming rhetoric from both sides, the people of western Pennsylvan­ia are tired of the fight.

Some people are switching health insurance plans. Others are switch- ing providers. Still others are finding refuge in national health plans that give access to both systems.

Bill McKendree, director of the Allegheny County Apprise program, which helps seniors choose Medicare plans, says confusion is common although people are finding solutions.

There’s an ongoing legal brawl over whether seniors with Highmark Medicare Advantage plans will be cut off from UPMC in mid2019 or at the end of the year.

“What we’ve gotten used to as a community is this luxury of being able, regardless of who our insurer was, to tap into this incredible wealth of health-care services in western Pennsylvan­ia,” McKendree said. “We’re starting to become aware of what other parts of America are also facing: limitation­s.”

The true test of whether the two big integrated systems can drive cost savings will come in 2019, when the split is final. But the competitiv­e friction is causing both to focus on consumer convenienc­e in new ways.

UPMC doctors write prescripti­ons for community health workers – employed by the insurance company – who help patients work to better manage chronic health conditions, such as diabetes. Highmark has a breathing-disorders clinic to help make a one-stop visit for the management of complex lung diseases that once might have involved a maze of appointmen­ts.

UPMC opened a cancer-specific emergency room to help patients whose acute health problems may be best helped by people familiar with their underlying disease and treatment regimen.

Highmark’s Wexford pavilion has a staffed play area for children whose parents are seeing doctors at the center.

“The tension of UPMC vs. Highmark, as difficult as it might be around the local watering holes of Pittsburgh, it’s not necessaril­y a bad thing,” said Tom Scully, a general partner at Welsh, Carson, Anderson & Stowe, a major health-care equity investor.

Many patients have yet to be convinced.

Kerr, recuperati­ng from a hysterecto­my, is not sure where she will land. She is looking for a primary-care doctor at Allegheny Health Network. She is considerin­g switching to UPMC’s health plan next year. But she’s unhappy – she doesn’t feel that either system is on her side.

“I suspect what we have is two Goliaths,” Kerr said.

 ?? Michael Henninger/The Washington Post ?? Kim Ralston, a CT technologi­st, prepares Bob Croft for a neck scan at the Allegheny Health Network’s health center in Wexford, Pennsylvan­ia, on Feb. 2.
Michael Henninger/The Washington Post Kim Ralston, a CT technologi­st, prepares Bob Croft for a neck scan at the Allegheny Health Network’s health center in Wexford, Pennsylvan­ia, on Feb. 2.

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