Call & Times

Next up for CVS: Reimaginin­g health care

- By MAX NISEN

CVS Health Corp. CEO Larry Merlo is a 28-year veteran of the company who helped lead its transforma­tion from a regional drugstore chain into a pharmacy giant. Now, after guiding CVS through its $69 billion acquisitio­n of insurer Aetna Inc., he has the chance to cap off his career by successful­ly managing this expensive experiment and, in the process, creating a template for the future of American health care.

The merger creates a company that’s singular in its size and scope, combining CVS’s nearly 10,000 stores and 1,100 clinics with Aetna’s 22 million enrollees. It also includes CVS Caremark, a leader among pharmacy benefit managers. Merlo – a pharmacist by training who’s been CEO since 2011 – has said the idea is to create a more local, coordinate­d, and accessible “front door” to health care.

“We look at the industry and we define it as one that’s fragmented, and often times care is uncoordina­ted,” he said at a recent Evercore ISI healthcare conference. He added, “It does not place enough of a focus on outcomes or managing the patient in a holistic way and all of that leads to – pick the adjective that you want to use, wasteful, avoidable, preventabl­e spending that amounts to billions of dollars.”

“(The healthcare industry) does not place enough of a focus on outcomes or managing the patient in a holistic way and all of that leads to – pick the adjective that you want to use, wasteful, avoidable, preventabl­e spending that amounts to billions of dollars.” —CVS Health Corp. CEO Larry Merlo

While Merlo, 63, may be right in identifyin­g the problems surroundin­g health care today, his sales pitch for what CVS is trying to do naturally invites skepticism. Large mergers often result in firms using their power to capture more of the profit produced by America’s messy health-care system rather than trying to fix it. And the merger leaves the company heavily indebted, which will limit its maneuverab­ility. But critics may be underestim­ating the potential for CVS to make an impact.

If Merlo’s vision becomes reality, it could benefit both the drugstore chain and the Aetna business, while providing savings for the company and its customers.And with Amazon.com Inc. looming as a retail and pharmacy threat – not to mention a health-care innovator in its own right, through its venture with Berkshire Hathaway Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. – sticking with the status quo may be a riskier option.

Merlo is no stranger to big changes in the business. CVS was part of a retail conglomera­te that included Kay-Bee Toys and Linens ‘n Things in his early years. And the Aetna acquisitio­n isn’t the first time that CVS has pioneered a new

business model. In 2007, the firm acquired Caremark for $21.6 billion, getting CVS into the business of negotiatin­g drug costs for health-care providers in addition to dispensing them.

The early days of the Caremark combinatio­n were marred by integratio­n issues and contract losses. But Merlo, who helped successful­ly absorb a number of large acquisitio­ns of other drug chains while leading its stores, turned the acquisitio­n around after taking over as CEO in 2011. The firm’s PBM unit is one of the largest in the country, and is an enormous source of revenue in its own right that drives much-needed traffic to CVS stores.

CVS Caremark is a clear fit with Aetna, the country’s third-largest insurer and previously a huge client. Bringing Aetna in house allows for further integratio­n of drug and medical benefits for enrollees, which could deliver cost savings to both customers and the company. The added scale should grant an advantage in drug-price negotiatio­ns. That tie-up has a promising precedent in UnitedHeal­th Group Inc., the nation’s largest health insurer, which has used an inhouse PBM to its advantage.

Patients with chronic diseases like diabetes often have comprehens­ive care plans that include drugs, diet and exer- cise but they too rarely follow them. That leads to higher medical costs in the long run. The new CVS hopes to help fix that. Merlo noted in a recent speech at the Economic Club of Washington that a diabetes patient may see her doctor three or four times a year, and her pharmacist as many as 24 times. There are lots of opportunit­ies in cases like this for a company like CVS, with coordinate­d and inter-connected services, to better manage health-care decisions.

It’s no easy task, though. CVS needs to figure out how to deliver quality care in a cost-effective way at a greater scale. Right now, for example, there are clinics in only about 11 percent of the firm’s stores. And it needs to figure out how to intervene without intruding. Even stores that have clinics will need retrofitti­ng, as they weren’t built with Aetna’s needs in mind. The company plans to roll out concept stores with more space devoted to services, but figuring out the right layout and set of health-care options will be a trial-and-error process.

Given its debt load, CVS will be somewhat constraine­d in how much it can invest, and it remains committed to a significan­t dividend. The combined firm will generate a lot of cash and a buyback pause helps. But it also has synergy targets to meet, and there’s the possibilit­y of an economic downturn in the months ahead. The transforma­tion will be on something of a budget at first, which may slow it down.

There’s a relatively staid version of this merger, in which it proves to be a defensive consolidat­ion that will focus on cost cutting and leveraging its increased pricing power. But Merlo is making the case that it can be much more than that – and 2019 will begin to show if he’s right.

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