Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Cyberattac­k costs hit UnitedHeal­th, but it beats expectatio­ns

- By Tom Murphy

UnitedHeal­th Group trounced first-quarter expectatio­ns even as costs from a cyberattac­k to its Change Healthcare business ate into the company’s performanc­e.

The health care giant also said Tuesday that care patterns in the year’s first quarter met its expectatio­ns after soaring medical costs at the end of last year surprised Wall Street.

UnitedHeal­th said earlier this year that a ransomware group had gained access to some of the systems of its Change Healthcare business, which provides technology used to submit and process insurance claims. The attack disrupted payment and claims processing around the country, stressing doctors offices and health care systems.

Federal civil rights investigat­ors are looking into whether protected health informatio­n was exposed in the attack.

UnitedHeal­th is still restoring several services from the February attack. It took an $872 million hit from it in the first quarter, but CEO Andrew Witty told analysts on Tuesday that the company expected to bring Change Healthcare back “much stronger than it was before.”

UnitedHeal­th also booked a roughly $7 billion charge in the quarter for selling a Brazilian health benefits and care provider it bought more than a decade ago.

Overall the company lost $1.41 billion in the first quarter. Total revenue grew more than 8% to $99.8 billion.

Adjusted earnings totaled $6.91 per share. That excluded the cost from the sale of the Brazilian business and some of expenses tied to the cyberattac­k.

Analysts expected earnings of $6.61 per share on $99.23 billion in revenue.

UnitedHeal­th provides health insurance for more than 49 million people in the United States. Its Optum segment also provides care, runs one of the nation’s largest pharmacy benefits management businesses and offers technology services.

Total costs tied to the cyberattac­k and recovery amounted to 74 cents per share in the quarter. About two-thirds of that, or 49 cents, was direct response costs that the company excluded from adjusted earnings.

That includes increased medical expenses the company incurred from suspending its pre-approval or prior authorizat­ion requiremen­ts for some care.

UnitedHeal­th expects the full impact of the cyberattac­k will amount to a hit of between $1.15 to $1.35 per share to earnings this year.

The Minnetonka, Minn., company on Tuesday also reaffirmed a 2024 earnings forecast it first laid out last fall for adjusted earnings of $27.50 to $28 per share.

Analysts expect earnings of $27.50 per share.

 ?? PATRICK SISON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pages from the United Healthcare website on a computer screen Feb. 29 in New York.
PATRICK SISON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pages from the United Healthcare website on a computer screen Feb. 29 in New York.

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