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Following Up On The Clover Health Stars Decision

This blog is a quick follow-up on the recent federal court decision in favor of Clover Health. The judge ruled that the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) could not include 20 current measures in the Star Rating program as they either are not allowed via statute or the agency failed to notice their inclusion or changes properly. The judge ordered Clover’s 2026 Star ratings to be recalculated. The agency moved swiftly and in an investor release Clover announced that CMS has recalculated its SY 2026 rating for its largest contract and advised the plan to submit an alternative 2027 bid. SY 2026 Star ratings impact 2027 calendar year payments. If and when the recalculation is applied, all of Clover Health’s 156,000 Medicare Advantage members would now be enrolled in plans rated at least four of five stars, generating some $120M in bonus payments in 2027. But there is

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Digging Into My Modest Election-Year Proposal For Healthcare Reform: Details Part 3 — Driving To Affordable Universal Access

NOTE: With the midterms coming and a bit of a lull in healthcare news, over the past few weeks I have been re-publishing my 2024 election year series on healthcare reform (with a few updates). It remains as relevant for midterms 2026 as it was two years ago. This blog is one in a four-part series that digs into my modest proposal for healthcare reform. See the introductory blog here to review my proposal more broadly: https://www.healthcarelabyrinth.com/a-modest-election-year-proposal-for-healthcare-reform-2/ . Here is the first detailed part on price reform: https://www.healthcarelabyrinth.com/digging-into-my-modest-election-year-proposal-for-healthcare-reform-details-part-1-the-importance-of-price-reform/ . Here is the second detailed part on pivoting to primary care and care management: https://www.healthcarelabyrinth.com/digging-into-my-modest-election-year-proposal-for-healthcare-reform-part-2-pivoting-to-primary-care-and-care-management-from-our-obsession-with-utilization-management/ . Much of my proposal is taken from my book, The Healthcare Labyrinth, available at this site and through leading bookseller websites. It is available in print, ebook, and audiobook forms. Driving to affordable universal access “… Let me add that the health and vitality of our people are at least

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My Latest Midterm Election Forecast

The House still looks very likely Democrat, with the Senate still in limbo As the midterms approach, I always give you a fresh look at what could happen in terms of control of Congress. My last look was roughly a quarter ago on March 12. I likely will do so again sometime just after the summer ends as we really get into campaign season. Since I am a political junkie, I might give you a monthly update (and even more frequently at the end) until November 3 hits. As I have said, healthcare will be a big part of how votes are cast in November. Affordability overall is a top issue this election year and healthcare affordability dominates this issue in many ways. The GOP at a disadvantage You can go back to my March 12 blog here ( https://www.healthcarelabyrinth.com/a-look-at-the-status-of-congressional-midterm-elections/ ) but wanted to quickly refresh on the uphill battle

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Digging Into My Modest Election-Year Proposal For Healthcare Reform: Details Part 2 — Pivoting To Primary Care and Care Management from Our Obsession With Utilization Management

NOTE: With the midterms coming and a bit of a lull in healthcare news, over the next few weeks I will be re-publishing my 2024 election year series on healthcare reform (with a few updates). It remains as relevant for midterms 2026 as it was two years ago. This blog is one in a four-part series that digs into my modest proposal for healthcare reform. See the introductory blog here to review my proposal more broadly: https://www.healthcarelabyrinth.com/a-modest-election-year-proposal-for-healthcare-reform-2/ . Here is the first detailed part on price reform: https://www.healthcarelabyrinth.com/digging-into-my-modest-election-year-proposal-for-healthcare-reform-details-part-1-the-importance-of-price-reform/ . Much of my proposal is taken from my book, The Healthcare Labyrinth, available at this site and through leading bookseller websites. It is available in print, ebook, and audiobook forms. Pivoting to care management from our obsession with utilization management In my introductory blog, I stressed that the cornerstones of reform are three key tenets – driving affordable universal access, reforming price, and pivoting

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Clover Wins Lawsuit And Could Mean More Change For Medicare Advantage Stars Program

Although Stars is not going anywhere, the combination of SY 2029 regulatory changes and the lawsuit mean more challenging times for Medicare Advantage plans. NOTE: This blog is published in collaboration with Lilac Software, Inc. For more information on Lilac’s Stars Analytics Platform, see the end of this blog. In a stunning decision, a federal judge in Georgia ruled in favor of Clover Health in its lawsuit challenging its 2026 Star Ratings. What’s more the judge seemingly has thrown out 20 measures in the program. The judge ordered just Cover’s 2026 ratings, impacting 2027 payments, to be recalculated. But it is hard to see how this could not impact all contracts if the ruling is upheld. Indeed, the Clover decision makes the 2024 Tukey cases and impacts look minor. I do not believe Stars is going anywhere. It is too important to value-based care overall. But the decision does throw

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Digging Into My Modest Election-Year Proposal For Healthcare Reform: Details Part 1 — The Importance Of Price Reform

NOTE: With the midterms coming and a bit of a lull in healthcare news, over the next few weeks I will be re-publishing my 2024 election year series on healthcare reform (with a few updates). It remains as relevant for midterms 2026 as it was two years ago. This blog is one in a four-part series that digs into my modest proposal for healthcare reform. See the introductory blog here to review my proposal more broadly: https://www.healthcarelabyrinth.com/a-modest-election-year-proposal-for-healthcare-reform-2/ . Much of my proposal is taken from my book, The Healthcare Labyrinth, available at this site and through leading bookseller websites. It is available in print, ebook, and audiobook forms. The importance of price reform In my “A Modest Election-Year Proposal For Healthcare Reform” blog, I stressed that the cornerstones of reform are three key tenets – driving affordable universal access, reforming price, and pivoting to primary care and care management from our

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A Modest Election-Year Proposal For Healthcare Reform

NOTE: With the midterms coming and a bit of a lull in healthcare news, over the next few weeks I will be re-publishing my 2024 election year series on healthcare reform (with a few updates). It remains as relevant for midterms 2026 as it was two years ago. In a recent blog, I told you that Democrats are heavily favored to win the House and that the Senate has become amazingly competitive. In part, this is because the GOP has failed to tackle affordability and the cost of healthcare is top of mind for many voters. More and more have seen their employer coverage costs skyrocket even as coverage became skimpier. Over 24M Exchange enrollees saw surges in premiums due to COVID subsidy enhancements expiring. Millions are expected to lose coverage in 2026. As most American grapple with healthcare affordability, there is little doubt in my mind that the time

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April to May 2026 Medicare Advantage Enrollment

May enrollment bounces back In a February 16 blog, I detailed the growth in Medicare Advantage (MA) from February 2025 to February 2026 after a delay from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) in posting the annual data. As I noted, the January enrollment statistics in both years seemed off, so many analysts are comparing February to February each year. On March 30, I updated my blog site with results for March 2026. On April 20, I updated my blog site with results for April 2026. Now, we have May results. For those who may have missed the earlier blogs, I am refreshing on some of the annual and early 2026 results. The annual statistics show some of the financial struggles the industry continues to have. Growth is way down compared with prior years in the 2020s due to major geographic contractions as well as plan benefit reductions

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2027 ACA Exchange Rule Signals Paradigm Shift

Even more innovation would be welcome Readers of this blog will know that I am on a bit of a transformation in terms of how I view coverage. I have always been a comprehensive coverage guy. I have backed reasonable subsidies as well as coverage that ensures people to access primary care and prevention upfront. But the problem is that coverage and benefit design in this country appear to be more broken than not. I recently have made the argument that coverage and strong benefits on paper do not mean people can truly access healthcare benefits with massive repercussions for people’s health and the nation’s quality statistics. I think this will continue to be true and almost certainly worsen if we do not reform price. And there is good reason to believe that even if we did reform price, looking at newer models to incentivize primary care and prevention should

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Health Plans’ Stocks Soar; So, Is All Well?

Health plans have plotted a comeback and so far it is working Q1 offered a cautiously encouraging picture for the U.S. health insurance sector. After a bruising couple of years marked by elevated utilization, Medicare Advantage (MA) margin compression, and policy disruption, most large plans are reporting improved financial performance. Stocks soared as a result. So, is plan financial health back? Well, not so fast. The positive financial performance is more a result of low expectations and plans are still, like Sisyphus, pushing a huge boulder up a hill. And given trends, it could very well come rolling back down. There was a literal financial meltdown at some plans beginning as early as 2024. Some of this was caused by external factors. But a great deal of it, too, was due to a lack of discipline by plans in multiple areas – finance, quality, and operations. It was an embarrassment

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