The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Insurers get into care, but is it good for your health?

- By Tom Murphy

In the not-too-distant future, your health insurance, your prescripti­on drugs and some of your treatment may come from the same company.

Insurers are dropping billions of dollars on acquisitio­ns and expansions in order to get more involved in customer health. They say this push can help cut costs and improve care, in part by keeping the sickest patients healthy and out of expensive hospitals.

That’s a huge potential benefit for employers and other customers stressed by rising costs. But is this good for your health?

That question worries some health care insiders who wonder if the patient’s best interest — and not profits — will remain the focus as insurers dive deeper into care.

“The fights about price and cost are only going to get worse. Now you’ve got more integrated and powerful private insurers ... coming up with the answer,” said medical ethicist Arthur Caplan.

The insurer Cigna said Thursday it will spend $52 billion to buy Express Scripts, which administer­s prescripti­on benefits for about 80 million people.

Late last year, CVS Health also announced a roughly $69 billion deal to buy another insurer, Aetna. Those companies plan to convert drugstores into health care hotspots that people can turn to for a variety of needs in between doctor visits.

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