Recent shopping spree extends into new category for the
nation's largest health insurer.
By Christopher Snowbeck Star Tribune
JUNE 12, 2018 — 3:44PM
UnitedHealth
Group is pushing further into the hearing aid business by purchasing the
subsidiary of a Swiss hearing aid manufacturer that manages insurance benefits
for the devices.
The
Minnetonka-based health care giant says it has directed customers for more than
a decade to a company called EPIC Hearing when employers want to supplement
their employee health insurance plan with financial benefits for workers who
need hearing aids.
Now,
UnitedHealth's health insurance division will sell the coverage directly
through a "specialty benefits" division that also offers vision,
dental and "income protection" policies, said Tom Wiffler, chief
executive for specialty benefits at UnitedHealthcare.
In
an interview with the Star Tribune, Wiffler confirmed that UnitedHealthcare on
March 30 acquired EPIC Hearing, which is a subsidiary of Sonova Holding AG.
Financial terms were not disclosed.
"We
think there's a growing demand for hearing solutions in America," Wiffler
said. "Earbud usage has caused some hearing loss in folks as young as 20s
and in their 30s. It's just another example of us trying to bring the full
suite of offerings to employers and consumers."
Sonova
says that its EPIC Hearing business had about $50 million in revenue in its
most recent year. The manufacturer did not disclose the buyer in slides
presented at a recent audiology conference.
"New
owner best positioned to propel growth of EPIC," the company said in the
slides. "Sonova poised to benefit from accelerated growth of EPIC."
The
deal is the latest of three involving UnitedHealth Group that have become
public in the past week or so. Last week, the company confirmed it was part of
a $2.2 billion acquisition of a physician staffing company based in Washington.
United also said last week that it was purchasing a Medicare HMO in Louisiana.
Company
chief executive David Wichmann did not mention any of the recent deals at an
investor conference in May, but commented: "We view M&A as a core capability
at UnitedHealth Group."
EPIC
Hearing has been part of the recent rise in the U.S. of hearing benefits and
companies known as "hearing benefit managers," according to a January
report from analysts with Bernstein Research. It noted that Kentucky-based
health insurer Humana announced last year that it would add hearing aid
benefits to Medicare Advantage health plans in more than two dozen states.
Hearing
benefit managers create a network of providers who agree to both furnish and
fit hearing aids at a negotiated price that represents a discount on retail,
said Lisa Bedell Clive, one of the Bernstein analysts. In the U.S., the insurer
often purchases the hearing aid, Clive said, and directs patients to specific
retailers to buy with a co-payment.
In
their report, Bernstein analysts said the typical retail price for a hearing
aid is about $2,000, whereas the out-of-pocket cost with the most generous
hearing benefits drops roughly $500 to $700. They estimated that revenue at
EPIC Hearing has grown at a low double-digit rate over the past eight years.
"We
estimate that today, perhaps 5 percent to 10 percent of U.S. hearing aid
private market purchases are at least partly funded by insurance,"
analysts wrote. "We believe that in 5 years, 15 percent to 20 percent of
purchases in the U.S. private market could be partly insurer funded, with
further uplift thereafter."
In
2011, UnitedHealth Group launched a program called Hi Health Innovations to
provide low-cost hearing aids to health plan subscribers. The program is part
of the company's Optum division for health services and will continue running
alongside the new business, said Wiffler, the UnitedHealthcare official.
"They're
very complementary," he said. "We know that there are more than 48
million Americans who have some degree of hearing loss."
Sales
have been sluggish at Hi Health Innovations, likely because the program
involves purchasing hearing aids online rather than with in-person counseling
from an audiologist, according to the Bernstein analysts. For hearing aid
manufacturers, the rise of insurance coverage for the devices cuts both ways.
"The
potential to bring in new customers by lowering out-of-pocket costs should
increase volumes in the market," the Bernstein analysts wrote.
"However, involvement of insurers could put extra pressure on retail
pricing and margins."
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