Las Vegas Review-Journal

Unitedheal­th sued over $8B deal

Agency: Merger would hurt competitio­n

- By Tom Murphy

Federal regulators are suing to block Unitedheal­th Group’s purchase of technology company Change Healthcare, a deal they fear will put too much health care claims informatio­n in the hands of one company.

The U.S. Department of Justice said Thursday that the proposed deal would hurt competitio­n and give Unitedheal­th Group — which runs the nation’s largest insurer — access to sensitive claims informatio­n from competitor­s.

“If America’s largest health insurer is permitted to acquire a major rival for critical health care claims technologi­es, it will undermine competitio­n for health insurance and stifle innovation in the employer health insurance markets,” U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland said in a statement.

Justice department officials said in the statement that the deal would give Unitedheal­th control of a “critical data highway through which about half of all Americans’ health insurance claims pass each year.”

They added that the company could then use that sensitive informatio­n from rivals for its own business purposes.

“Although it carefully safeguards its own claims data, United covets its rivals’ claims data and has long sought to acquire Change for this reason,” regulators said in a complaint filed in federal court.

A Unitedheal­th spokesman said Thursday the Justice department’s “deeply flawed position is based on highly speculativ­e theories that do not reflect the realities of the health care system. We will defend our case vigorously.”

The lawsuit, filed Thursday, drew praise from several groups, including the National Community Pharmacist­s Associatio­n, which called the deal a “threat to fair competitio­n, patient choice, and independen­t pharmacies.”

The American Economic Liberties Project, which advocates for stricter antitrust regulation, said the deal would allow Unitedheal­th to further entrench “its monopoly power at the expense of patients, health care providers, and the resiliency of our entire health care system.”

Unitedheal­th said in January 2021 that it would spend nearly $8 billion in cash to add the Nashville, Tennessee, company and boost its ability to provide data analytics and revenue cycle management support, among other offerings.

The deal totals around $13 billion counting debt, and the companies had initially expected it to close in the second half of 2021.

Change provides technology used to submit and process insurance claims. When they announced the deal, Unitedheal­th and Change touted the combinatio­n as a way to cut administra­tive waste, ensure doctors get paid faster and help them make some patient care decisions more quickly and easier.

Health insurers and big employers that pay medical claims have grown more interested in monitoring claims and how patients receive care.

Aside from running a health insurer, Unitedheal­th also operates a growing Optum business that provides care, manages pharmacy claims and offers technology services and support.

Regulators called Unitedheal­th a “serial acquirer that has purchased more than 35 healthcare companies over the past 10 years” in their court complaint.

The Department of Justice was joined by attorneys general from Minnesota and New York in filing the lawsuit.

 ?? Jim Mone The Associated Press file ?? Federal regulators are suing to block Unitedheal­th Group’s purchase of the technology company Change Healthcare, a deal announced more than a year ago.
Jim Mone The Associated Press file Federal regulators are suing to block Unitedheal­th Group’s purchase of the technology company Change Healthcare, a deal announced more than a year ago.

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