Giant U.S. health writers expand with push into individual market.Several of the largest U.S. publicly traded health insurance companies are delving aggressively into the individual health marketplace, some through strategic acquisitions, as small employers take less of a role in providing health insurance for their employees--a trend that offers these companies a potentially profitable piece of the overall health insurance pie. Major health insurers are getting into the individual, or nongroup, market because it seems to be the fastest-growing sector of the insurance population, said William Gedwed, president and chief executive officer of UICI. Based in North Richland, Texas Richland is a town in Navarro County, Texas, United States. The population was 291 at the 2000 census. Geography Richland is located at (31.926052, -96.426350)GR1. , UICI provides health, life and related products. Like its peers, UICI now is competing with giants such as UnitedHealth Group UnitedHealth Group Incorporated NYSE: UNH is a managed health care company. It is the parent of United Healthcare, one of the largest health insurers in the U.S. It was created in 1977, as UnitedHealthCare Corporation (it renamed itself in 1998), but traces its origin to a Inc. and PacifiCare Health Systems PacifiCare Health Systems (former NYSE: PHS) was a Fortune 500 healthcare company based in Cypress, California. It was acquired by UnitedHealth Group (NYSE: UNH) in late 2005, which continues to market health plans under the PacifiCare name. Inc. "They are saying, 'we see that the customers in the individual market are expanding, and the best way is to acquire somebody that is already there,'" Gedwed said. In December, PacifiCare completed its acquisition of Green Bay, Wis adv. 1. Certainly; really; indeed. v. t. 1. To think; to suppose; to imagine; - used chiefly in the first person sing. present tense, I wis. See the Note under Ywis. .-based American Medical Security Group at a total equity purchase price of about $505 million. American Medical provides several individual and small-group insurance products to members in 33 states and the District of Columbia District of Columbia, federal district (2000 pop. 572,059, a 5.7% decrease in population since the 1990 census), 69 sq mi (179 sq km), on the east bank of the Potomac River, coextensive with the city of Washington, D.C. (the capital of the United States). . Before that, in November 2003, UnitedHealth acquired for $500 million Golden Rule Financial Corp. of Indianapolis. At the time, A.M. Best Co. said Golden Rule was a leader in the individual and group association major-medical market. Brad Bowlus, president and chief executive officer of PacifiCare's health plan division, said individual health is a rapidly expanding market. "We've noticed in group insurance that there has been a decline in the number of small-group employers, and some employers are now opting to cover their employees more on an individual basis," he said. Gedwed noted his bigger rivals' strategies. "Companies are making an aggressive effort to say, instead of robbing Aetna's customers, if I am United, I am going to get into the individual marketplace and acquire companies where I can start to expand nay nay adv. 1. No: All but four Democrats voted nay. 2. And moreover: He was ill-favored, nay, hideous. n. 1. A denial or refusal. market presence," he said. American Medical is about 75% individual and 25% small group, Bowlus said. "Their real prowess PROWESS Infectious disease A clinical trial–Recombinant Human Activated Protein C [Zovant™] Worldwide Evaluation in Severe Sepsis was in the individual space, no different than Golden Rule that United acquired. "We saw that as acquiring not just the membership but a lot of the infrastructure, know-how and product that goes along with serving that customer segment," he said. American Medical's broker distribution channel, numbering about 30,000, complements PacifiCare's. "We are able to take the best of both product portfolios and then push those out within each of the broker populations," Bowlus said, noting PacifiCare has access to a captive captive said of naturally wild or feral animals kept in captivity for educational and scientific investigation with no attempt being made to domesticate them. agency force. Another driver of the interest in the individual market is that "there's still a significant portion of the uninsured market that is relatively affluent, and with the products ... we believe that's a very viable market," said Bowlus. Michael Taylor Michael Taylor may refer to:
It was established 1 March 1934 as Towers, Perrin, Forster & Crosby. The umbrella name of Towers Perrin was adopted in 1987. , noted that for several years, many of the large carriers had individual and small-group businesses. But "through a series of bad things, mostly benign neglect benign neglect Decision-making A stance of nonintervention that a clinician may adopt in the face of lesions and clinical conditions which have an uncertain or stable clinical course. Cf Watchful waiting. , poor pricing, bad risk ... that business became very unprofitable for them," he said. The big health insurers have returned to profitability, Taylor said. "They've learned the lessons about underwriting Underwriting 1. The process by which investment bankers raise investment capital from investors on behalf of corporations and governments that are issuing securities (both equity and debt). 2. The process of issuing insurance policies. , pricing and the characteristics of the individual market," he said. Aetna Inc. is looking at the "stratas" of the uninsured U.S. population--estimated at 45 million--and trying to find products to address the problem, said company spokesman David Carter People called David Carter include:
Research indicates the uninsured market includes nearly 4 million college and university students and 24 million part-time and hourly workers, the majority of whom don't have employer-sponsored health insurance, Aetna said.
Health-Care Trends,
Nonelderly, 2002-2003
The percentage of the nonelderly
(under age 65) population without
insurance rose from 17.3% in 2002
to 17.7% in 2003 (or 44.7 million
uninsured), an increase of 1.4
million over 2002.
2002 2003
250 Million 25.7 Million
People People
Private Non-Group 5.3% 5/3%
Employment-Based 63.3% 61.9%
Medicaid/Other Public* 14.1% 15.1%
Uninsured 17.3% 17.7%
*Includes the State Children's Health Insurance
Program, other state programs, Medicare and
military-related coverage
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