insurers

The Direct Primary Care Craze

New healthcare model could take off with budget bill changes While the recent budget reconciliation bill, known as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) is known for some very atrocious cuts to coverage, some are celebrating the major expansion of Direct Primary Care (DPC). Proponents see this expansion as one cost-effective way of expanding or maintaining coverage in the nation. What is DPC?  DPC is a healthcare model where patients pay a recurring, fixed fee (monthly or annually) directly to a primary care physician for access to a defined set of services. The model is not technically insurance and billing does not go through insurance. The physician bills the participant monthly or annually and the participant has access to all of the limited covered services offered by the doctor or practice. DPC usually offers a defined set of primary-care-oriented services, including routine checkups, chronic disease management, acute care visits,

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Chopping Away At The Employer Coverage Thicket

New bill could bring unprecedented transparency and reform. Employer coverage costs have been growing profoundly the past several years. Average annual hikes have been between 6% and 9% and 2026 could see spending hikes at the top of the range. A great deal drives the consistent high growth in employer premiums: A sixth major culprit is the opagueness of the financial arrangements between health plans and employer groups. Health plans, acting as administrators, continually disadvantage employers in numerous ways and they do not disclose various underlying costs to the employer groups. Many employers are none the wiser that they have inefficient and bloated arrangements with health plan administrators. One example of these opague financial arrangements are the non-arms-length related party agreements hidden from employers. This has led some employers to demand more transparency, although health plans and pharmacy benefits managers (who sometimes have separate contracts) continue to shroud their financial

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House MA Hearing Shows What’s In Store For Insurers

Both Republicans and Democrats want major Medicare Advantage reform. The July 22, 2025 hearing on Medicare Advantage (MA) by the House Ways and Means Subcommittees on Health and Oversight should be a wakeup call for MA plans. Of late, Capitol Hill has become far more active on MA issues. Democrats on the committee spoke of their usual gripes – overpayments to MA plans with little or no benefit and the need to augment the traditional Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) program. The striking change was the stance of Republicans, who generally supported the program but were on board for many of the same reforms Democrats proposed. Committee members on both sides cited what I think is the hyperbolic statistic from congressional policy arm MedPAC that MA is paid over $80 billion a year (over 20%) more vs. FFS. Democrats and some Republicans argued that MA was not saving the country money as

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June to July 2025 Medicare Advantage Enrollment

Despite financial woes in MA, enrollment keeps chugging along. A quick blog to tell you about enrollment growth in Medicare Advantage (MA) from June 2025 to July 2025. MA growth slowed down from 2024 to 2025 because of the financial woes of the MA industry. But the rolls are still growing due to aging and the popularity and value of MA compared with the archaic traditional Medicare (fee-for-service) program. What do the latest statistics show? Growth from January 2024 to February 2025 was 4.39% or 1.468 million. (I used February 2025 because of issues with the January 2025 statistics). Enrollment in MA reached 34.941M in February 2025. In July 2025, it reached 35.437M. MA enrollment grew about 80K from June to July and about 496K from February to July. How did Big MA do? From January 2024 to February 2025, Big Plan MA enrollment performed very poorly because of retrenchment

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2024 Medicare Advantage and Part D Program Audit Enforcement Report Out: What Does It Tell Us?

CMS is upping the ante on program audits, enforcement, and penalties Each year, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) issues its Part C and Part D Program Audit and Enforcement Report. I liked how CMS did it in years past, where actual plan audit scores as well as average scores by audit area were released. It gave you a great feel for where plans were struggling the most. Nonetheless, the report continues to be a good tool for Medicare Advantage (MA) and Part D plans (MA-PD or standalone PDP) to review and hone their compliance chops. Here are the major findings from this most recent report and last year’s (link at bottom for 2023 and 2024 reports).  Background CMS has been expanding the audits it does, using both internal and external expertise. In 2023, a total of 69 MA-PD contracts were audited — 31 of these contracts offered special needs plans

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Health Plans And Their Finances Post The Big Beautiful Bill

The budget bill will mean more turmoil and a steeper climb to financial recovery for health plans In a number of blogs recently, I have discussed the ongoing financial pain of health plans. I characterized health plan efforts to recover financially as cloudy and rocky going into 2026 and beyond. But I have yet to really layer in the impact of the One Big Beautiful Bill on health plan finances moving forward. To state it clearly, it makes things dramatically worse. I told you that health plans are already fighting a number of headwinds: In general, we have seen annual spending growth trends of 6% to 9% in the past few years. For 2026 and some years beyond, annual trends will hit the lower end of the range, with some lines of business (e.g., employer coverage) seeing costs trends at the high end. So how will the One Big Beautiful

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The Politics Of The BBB: Will The Budget Bill Cause Fallout For The GOP?

Will Democrats successfully tar Republicans with budget bill healthcare cuts? Democrats are gearing up for the 2026 midterm elections and they think they have a crucial issue to help them win back control of at least one house of Congress – despite their political meltdown this past year. The hapless Democrats see the budget reconciliation cuts to healthcare as a pivotal issue to swing at least some control back to their party. Politics is more predictable than fickle. I looked at every midterm election since 1934. If I have this right, only on two occasions has the party in control of the White House gained seats in both houses at midterm elections. A third midterm sort of meets the test. In 1934, the Democrats under Franklin Delano Roosevelt gained 9 seats in each house. In 2002, George W. Bush’s Republicans gained 8 seats in the House and 2 in the

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Health Plans’ Gambit On Prior Authorization

Health plans preempt CMS action on prior authorization with reforms of their own For the past few years, the feeling was palpable at health plans. State and federal regulators and lawmakers were tightening the screws on health plan prior authorization (PA). And so to preempt further regulatory action on the issues, plans have agreed to make further reforms on their own. What changes are already in place? On the Medicare Advantage (MA) front, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) did a number of things on the PA front. For the past decade, the agency has honed its program audit protocols for both pharmacy and medical service requests and appeals. It spends a great deal of time on recent audits diving into the whole PA life cycle and digs deep on the application of medical necessity criteria for both pharmacy and medical services. It also finalized a significant interoperability

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Saga Over: Big Beautiful Bill Has Passed – For Good Or Bad

Trump’s bill passes, but there will be major repercussions for healhcare coverage Well, the months-long saga is over. For good or bad, the budget reconciliation bill, known as the One Big Beautiful Bill (BBB), has passed. It marks a tremendous political achievement for President Donald Trump and Republican lawmakers. President Donald Trump signed the BBB and touted it as a landmark major tax and domestic policy bill. The bill extends tax reductions ready to expire and enacts new ones. At the same time, it institutes massive cuts to Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act (ACA) that could remove millions of people from Medicaid and the Exchanges. The bill will mean tremendous changes for healthcare in America. I have advocated for what I call smart healthcare reductions – ones that seek to reduce price in the system and promote greater efficiency. But the healthcare cuts in the bill are anything but

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Latest National Health Expenditure Data Show The Challenges In Healthcare

Projections for the next ten year show tremendous growth in healthcare costs Each December, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Office of the Actuary releases its official and complete National Health Expenditure Data (NHED) for the previous year. So, in December, we will see the final 2024 results. Given the now expected $5 trillion plus in expenditures, it takes literally a year to sum it all up and categorize it. Each June, though, the CMS actuary issues an estimate for the prior year and projects expenditures out ten years. We just got the CMS actuary’s projections for 2024 to 2033. As expected, the news is not good. The actuarial projections show a chilling annual trend that will have huge repercussions on costs over the next decade. More importantly, the huge growth in spending will impact coverage, benefits, employer costs, and out-of-pocket costs for Americans. Why is NHED so

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