Sep 14, 2020, 02:00 pm EDT Bruce Japsen Senior Contributor
Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New jersey
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Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey and two of the state’s
biggest hospital systems are forming a health plan specifically to tap into the
fast-growing business of Medicare Advantage, the privatized health insurance
for seniors.
Horizon Blue Cross Monday said it is launching a new health plan
it will jointly own with Hackensack Meridian Health, which operates 17
hospitals and an array of outpatient medical care providers across New Jersey.
The two hope to soon add RWJBarnabas Health, which includes 11 hospitals, to
the partnership pending regulatory approvals in New Jersey.
The new health plan, called Braven Health, will be jointly owned
by Horizon and Hackensack Meridian, and will begin this fall marketing “a new
New Medicare Advantage Offering in Eight Counties Starting January 1, 2021,”
the companies said.
“Braven Health plans use Horizon BCBSNJ’s existing Medicare
Advantage managed care networks, meaning that every doctor and hospital that
participates in those networks, which are among the largest in New Jersey, will
also be in-network for comparable Braven Health plans,” the companies involved
said in statement Monday afternoon. “As a Blue Cross Blue Shield (BCBS) plan,
Braven Health’s members choosing a PPO plan will also have access to the BCBS
national Medicare Advantage PPO network whenever outside of New Jersey.”
The effort is the latest by health insurance companies to form
closer ties with medical care providers when it comes to selling health
coverage and Medicare Advantage in particular.
Already, CVS Health, which two years ago bought the health insurer
Aetna, is jointly selling health plan products highlighting CVS
pharmacists, clinics and related providers while the nation’s largest health
insurer, UnitedHealth Group, which owns the healthcare services and provider
business Optum, has long been developing health insurance products targeting
seniors and others. And other health plans, including Anthem, which operates
Blue Cross and Blue Shield plans in 14 states, has acquired doctor practices that treat hundreds of
seniors in Florida as a way to expand its Medicare Advantage
business.
Medicare Advantage plans contract with the federal government to
provide health benefits to seniors plus some extras and rules have changed to
allow these private insurers to offer more supplemental benefits as well. Major
health insurers are expanding into new markets to sell Medicare Advantage and
the Horizon Blue Cross effort with Hackensack Meridian Health and RWJBarnabas
is yet another way to attract seniors by highlighting medical care providers
they know.
“Today’s Medicare eligible New Jerseyan wants a health care
partner that supports their active, vibrant lifestyles,” Horizon Blue Cross
chief executive Gary D. St. Hilaire said in a statement. “By providing a health
care experience that is comprehensive, integrated and simple to navigate, Braven
Health is a new way to health for a new generation of Medicare members.”
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