By Paige Minemyer | Jul 24, 2020
12:48pm
Cigna is moving full
speed ahead with significant expansion in the Medicare Advantage market
and has tapped a new exec to spearhead that effort.
Aparna
Abburi was named president
of Cigna’s Medicare Advantage business earlier this month, joining Cigna after
stints at the helm of Health Care Services Corporation’s Medicare business
and leadership roles at Centene Corporation and UnitedHealth Group.
Abburi told Fierce Healthcare
that her decision to join Cigna was sealed by the insurer’s response to
COVID-19, which she says “set the tone” for the industry.
“It really resonated
with me,” she said.
Cigna views the MA
space as ripe for significant growth, and the insurer announced ahead of open
enrollment last year that it would launch its largest expansion ever into
the market. Abburi teased similar plans are coming when insurers begin to
formally announce their 2021 MA offerings.
Cigna is overall
aiming for 10% to 15% customer growth each year as a long-term goal.
However, she said
there’s still plenty of room for Cigna to grow in the Medicare market
specifically. Her team is working to both grow offerings
into geographies the insurer serves already with commercial plans and to
expand the types plans available to seniors.
Cigna is also
“aggressively” eyeing the group Medicare market, Abburi said.
Cigna is far from the
only health plan that sees Medicare Advantage as a major opportunity for growth
and a segment where profits are growing. Startup health plan Clover
Health is planning to triple its
geographic footprint in the 2021 plan year, and
UnitedHealthcare added hundreds of thousands of
MA members to its rolls during 2019 open enrollment.
It’s a trend Abburi
doesn’t seen slowing down as baby boomers continue to age into the Medicare
program over the next decade. Medicare Advantage enrollment has doubled
over the past 20 years, according to data from
the Kaiser Family Foundation, growing from 18% of seniors enrolled in the
program in 1999 to 36% in 2020.
“It clearly won’t be
the choice for 100% of them, but the needle moving toward more choosing
MA,” Abburi said.
And as insurers eye
further growth in this market, the changes COVID-19 has brought to the
industry, such as the massive expansion of virtual, must be a
consideration as Medicare Advantage continues to evolve, she said.
Those changes likely
require an approach designed to best fit the senior market, Abburi
said.
“I think COVID is going
to significantly alter some of the care delivery mechanisms,” she said.
“But, you also have to be very mindful, especially in this
population.”
No comments:
Post a Comment