CRAIN'S DETROIT BUSINESS June 10, 2019
Detroit-based managed-care company Health
Alliance Plan is jumping back into the Medicaid HMO business in metro Detroit,
signing a deal to acquire the Detroit-based Medicaid plan Trusted HP-Michigan,
the insurer said Monday.
Trusted HP, which covers 9,000 members, mostly in
Wayne County, is formerly known as Harbor Health Plan. The company said the
deal marks HAP's re-entrance into the state's Medicaid HMO area called Region
10, which includes Wayne, Oakland and Macomb counties.
HAP would not provide financial details of the
transaction, including the purchase price.
The plans manage healthcare needs under state
contracts for people covered under the federal- and state-funded health
insurance program for the poor.
"We are thrilled to announce a return to
offering a Medicaid option that serves the people of metro Detroit,"
Wright L. Lassiter III, president and CEO of HAP's owner Henry Ford Health
System, said in a written statement. "As both a health insurer and
healthcare provider, we are uniquely positioned to offer seamless, holistic
care and coverage to our Medicaid population — a fully integrated approach
focusing on quality and efficiency that creates lasting value for our patients
and members."
Trusted HP-Michigan reported a net loss of $3.6
million on revenue of $26.9 million in 2018, according to state filings. Through the first quarter of this year,
it had posted net income of $356,566 on revenue of $9.5
million.
HAP currently offers Medicaid products only the
state's Region 6, which includes Genesee, Huron, Lapeer, Shiawassee, St. Clair
and Tuscola counties in mid-Michigan and the Thumb, where it covers about 3,500
people. The company also said it participates in the MI Health Link Dual
Demonstration Project, serving 4,500 people who are eligible for both Medicare
and Medicaid in Wayne and Macomb counties.
HAP said in a statement that members of Trusted
HP-Michigan will be able to keep the same doctors and use their current
identification cards. The two dozen employees of Trusted HP will join HAP.
"True integration between provider and
payer is extremely important to our Medicaid population," Terri Kline,
president and CEO of Health Alliance Plan, said in a written statement.
"We also know how critical it is to understand our members' individual
needs and concerns. By uniting our dedication to both, we are creating
something truly exceptional for the people of southeast Michigan and we are so
excited to welcome these new members into the HAP family."
The acquisition is subject to regulatory approval
and is expected to be completed in late summer, the company said in the
statement.
In 2015, much of HAP's Medicaid business
evaporated when it lost a state contract for about 85,000 Medicaid members in
Southeast Michigan due to a decision by the state to reduce the number of plans
in that area. Molina Healthcare bought the remaining business later that year. HAP had
acquired what became HAP Midwest for $70 million four years before.
The deal would mark the second new owner in two
years for the former Harbor Health Plan, which sold itself to Washington, D.C.-based Trusted Health
Care in early 2017. The plan was formerly owned by Tenet Healthcare Corp.,
parent of Detroit Medical Center, which exited the health insurance business as
part of restructuring.
"Health Alliance Plan to acquire Detroit-based Medicaid health plan"originally appeared in Crain's Detroit Business.
https://www.modernhealthcare.com/mergers-acquisitions/health-alliance-plan-acquire-detroit-based-medicaid-health-plan
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