Cigna
CEO defends Anthem deal, says consumer will still have
choice
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[September 17, 2015]
By Caroline Humer
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Health insurer
Anthem's planned $47 billion takeover of rival Cigna will not hurt
consumers but increase choice and affordability, Cigna CEO David Cordani
said, defending the merger against widespread criticism that it will
harm competition.
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The Anthem-Cigna deal and a plan by Aetna Inc to buy Humana have
come in the wake of the implementation of the Affordable Care Act
and amid pressure on insurers to keep healthcare spending down for
their biggest customers - employers and the U.S. government.
"It's going to increase choice, not decrease choice. It's going to
increase affordability, not decrease affordability," Cordani told
Reuters in an interview, saying results-oriented contracts with
doctors and hospitals would help consumers be healthier and trim
medical spending.
Cordani said the biggest overlap in a combination of their $115
billion businesses is their large employer-based divisions and asset
sales may be necessary to win regulatory approval, though he expects
that would only be on a limited basis.
"Divestitures through the DOJ process should be modest and
manageable. And we've leaned on the conservative side of the
business case that supports this," he said, but added it was too
early to say what might be offered up.
About 150 million Americans get their health insurance through their
employers, many of which are large companies.
In the past few weeks, both the American Medical Association and the
American Hospital Association have issued written criticisms of the
deal. Congress held a hearing on insurer competition last week and
another hearing is scheduled in the Senate next week in which Anthem
CEO Joseph Swedish and Aetna CEO Mark Bertolini are scheduled to
appear.
The company expects the Department of Justice review to take 12 to
18 months during which it will look at the extent of their overlap
in market share for Medicaid for the poor, Medicare Advantage for
seniors, individual insurance, small employers and large employers.
Cordani said the detailed nature of the review would show few
competitive issues. There was little geographical overlap in their
Medicaid and Medicare businesses and he is also not anticipating
issues with the individual business, where Cigna is a new player,
nor with small employer-based plans.
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He added that insurers would not see outsized benefits from cutting
costs through their combinations because customers typically demand
that spending savings be passed onto them.
So far, Cordani said, employers have been optimistic that the
combination will enable them to combine the results-oriented care
management programs for diseases like diabetes that Cigna has used
to cut healthcare spending in Medicare and commercial plans, and
combine them with the Anthem's strong Blue Cross Blue Shield
networks.
"Within that, there may be deemed by the DOJ some overlap that is
not acceptable and we'll deal with that," he said.
On branding, he said that in a state like Georgia, where Cigna and
Anthem both operate, the companies can continue with their Cigna and
Anthem branded plans and designs.
(Reporting by Caroline Humer; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)
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