What Would the CVS/Aetna Merger Mean for Healthcare?

Despite the uncertainty surrounding the industry, healthcare mergers and acquisitions, like the proposed CVS Health/Aetna deal, continue to occur. Healthcare is leading other industries in high-grade M&A activity and, according to a PwC report, the health care industry has initiated more than 200 deals per quarter for 12 straight quarters since 2015.

If the CVS and Aetna deal is approved, the acquisition will be the largest healthcare insurance deal on record based on Aetna’s market capitalization. How could this impact the healthcare industry as a whole? Bruce Carver, associate vice president of payer services, recently connected with Managed Healthcare Executive to share his thoughts. Here are three key implications outlined from the discussion:

  • Impact on Industry Competition – If the merger is approved, healthcare executives will likely need to rethink traditional industry competitors as this would establish market competition against national payer UnitedHealth Group and its ownership of OptumRx.
  • Greater Transparency From Pharmacy Benefit Managers (PBMs) – PBMs have historically been viewed as the drug purchasing middlemen to negotiate lower prices. However, questions have arisen as to whether the savings have actually been passed on to employers and/or consumers. As a result, the market is demanding more pricing transparency. New integrated models, similar to the one created by the CVS and Aetna merger, will help facilitate that transparency.
  • Give Employers and Consumers More Control – By allowing employers and consumers to own more of their healthcare and pharmacy benefits, the industry could save millions. For example, by creating pharmacy benefits that incentivize people with chronic conditions (e.g. diabetes, high blood pressure) to fill and adhere to their medications, the industry could prevent avoidable hospital admissions that cost over $100 billion a year. An integrated insurer, like CVS and Aetna, could establish such incentives.

To read more insights from Bruce, and other industry experts, check out the full Managed Healthcare Executive articles here and here. If you’re looking for a partner to help your organization manage the shifting healthcare landscape, contact us here.

Posted in

MedeAnalytics

MedeAnalytics is a leader in healthcare analytics, providing innovative solutions that enable measurable impact for healthcare payers and providers. With the most advanced data orchestration in healthcare, payers and providers count on us to deliver actionable insights that improve financial, operational, and clinical outcomes. To date, we’ve helped uncover millions of dollars in savings annually.

Leave a Comment





Get our take on industry trends

Avoid COVID-19 modeling pitfalls by eliminating bias, using good data

June 2, 2020

COVID-19 models are being used every day to predict the course and short- and long-term impacts of the pandemic. And we’ll be using these COVID-19 models for months to come.

Read on...

Population Health Amid the Coronavirus Outbreak

May 19, 2020

In speaking with many colleagues throughout the provider and payer healthcare community, I’ve found an overwhelming sense of helplessness to the outbreak’s onslaught. This is exacerbated by the constant evolution of reported underlying medical conditions that indicate a higher risk of hospitalization or mortality for a coronavirus patient.

Read on...

COVID-19 and the Financial Storm Ahead for Providers

May 14, 2020

Across the country, healthcare organizations are seeing 40%-80% declines in monthly charges with some of the most profitable services lines only seeing 20% of their normal monthly volumes during the pandemic.

Read on...

3 Steps Any Healthcare Organization Can Take to Improve Enterprise Analytics

February 24, 2020

By Kristin Weir When it comes down to the most basic purpose of why organizations use analytics, it’s simple: they…

Read on...