Modern Healthcare

UnitedHeal­th earnings decline suggests COVID-19 boon is subsiding

- By Shelby Livingston

UNITEDHEAL­TH GROUP reported lower earnings in the third quarter of 2020 compared with a year ago, suggesting that the period of record profits large health insurers reaped early in the COVID-19 pandemic may have ended.

In the second quarter, Minnetonka, Minn.-based UnitedHeal­th, the parent company of insurer UnitedHeal­thcare, nearly doubled its net income as providers deferred costly non-urgent procedures and patients put off routine care to comply with stay-at-home orders and practice social distancing.

Many patients have since returned to hospitals and doctor’s offices for the healthcare services they postponed, UnitedHeal­th said. At the same time, the company spent billions to prop up providers, lower premiums and waive copayments for customers.

Those actions, along with the rebound in healthcare use to near-normal levels, weighed down UnitedHeal­th’s bottom line. The company reported $3.3 billion in net earnings in the third quarter, down 10.3% from the same period in 2019. Operating earnings totaled $4.7 billion, down 7.2% from a year ago.

“Third-quarter results continued to be impacted by disruptive care patterns, albeit to a much lesser extent than in the second quarter,” UnitedHeal­th Chief Financial Officer John Rex told analysts during a conference call last week. “Care deferral impacts were more than offset by the proactive consumer and customer assistance measures we voluntaril­y undertook earlier this year, as well as COVID-19 care and testing costs and broader economic effects.”

UnitedHeal­th is still collecting gigantic profits, but those profits were driven less by the pandemic during the most recent quarter. Some of that is the company’s doing.

UnitedHeal­th returned excess profits it made earlier during the pandemic by donating meals to vulnerable patients and waiving cost-sharing for seniors for primary care and specialty care appointmen­ts. Like other insurers, it waived costs for COVID-19 treatment and provided free telehealth visits. Those actions took at least one quarter to reflect in the earnings.

Health insurers want to minimize the appearance that they are profiting from a global health crisis and reduce some of the rebates they will be forced to pay customers next year for failing to spend enough on medical claims in 2020. The Affordable Care Act caps insurers’ profit margins.

Americans are also beginning to seek care like they did before the pandemic.

UnitedHeal­th said patients are getting care at about 95% the rate they normally do, whereas in the second quarter utilizatio­n plummeted to about two-thirds of normal levels. Patients are still seeing their doctors less often, but inpatient care rates are now higher than normal, the company said.

Medical costs and operating costs were higher in the third quarter compared with a year ago. UnitedHeal­thcare’s medical-loss ratio, which hit 70% in the second quarter, rebounded to a near-normal level as well. The company’s medical-loss ratio, which represents the portion of premiums spent on medical care, was 81.9%, a slight decrease from 82.4% a year ago.

Insurers have warned that they could see sicker patients and more-expensive medical claims in the second half of the year and beyond because the illnesses of patients who put off needed care during the pandemic may have worsened. So far, that hasn’t happened among UnitedHeal­thcare’s members who don’t have COVID-19.

In total, UnitedHeal­th reported revenue of $65.1 billion, up 7.9% from a year ago, driven by growth at health services subsidiary Optum and insurance arm UnitedHeal­thcare’s Medicare and Medicaid businesses. UnitedHeal­th raised its full-year earnings per share guidance. ●

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