Thursday, December 12, 2019

CVS to Buy Centene's Illinois Medicaid, MA Lines


CVS Health Corp.'s new agreement to buy Centene Corp.'s Illinois health plan doesn't fall under the "megadeal" category. But industry experts see broader implications as health care players large and small continue to jockey for position and focus on strengthening their footholds in Medicaid managed care and, especially, the lucrative Medicare Advantage (MA) program.
On Dec. 2, Centene said it has entered into a definitive agreement with CVS Health that is related to Centene's previously announced merger agreement with WellCare Health Plans, Inc. Once state and federal regulatory hurdles are cleared, CVS Health is to acquire Centene's Illinois health plan subsidiary, IlliniCare Health Plan, Inc., in a deal involving the sale of Centene's Medicaid and MA lines of business in Illinois.
Just as PBMs were seen previously as "great acquisitive opportunities, now we think the next round of opportunity is grabbing as many MA plans as possible," and being "opportunistic" when required divestitures in a given state come along, as in this case, Ashraf Shehata, KPMG's national sector leader for health care and life sciences, tells AIS Health.
"If I were picking states to make a Medicare Advantage impact, it would be major metro areas…in the Northeast, Midwest and South," Shehata says. "It could be a great proving ground for the retail model," he says.
Shehata views Illinois as a potential "building block" for CVS Health, with MA and Medicaid, "a strong commercial population" and potential Affordable Care Act exchange business on top of that — which "makes it successful and scalable for a large plan."
Yet he says while Illinois offers opportunities for market growth, the state has a complicated insurance market built for those "very large players" able to cover wide rural areas as well as Chicago. The difficulty in Illinois is provider contracting: "As soon as you step out of the Blues network, it is more favorable on the provider, not the payer side," in terms of negotiations, he says.

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