Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Cigna Makes Plans To Link Executive Pay With Customer Satisfaction
Cigna Group said it will tie its executives鈥 pay to customer satisfaction in a move that follows an outcry against the insurance industry over denials of care. The change is the start of what Cigna called a yearslong effort to improve customers鈥 experience and 鈥渆nsure accountability,鈥 the company said in a statement Monday. (Tozzi, 2/3)
Amanda Watson was diagnosed with breast cancer three weeks after having an emergency cesarean section to deliver her second son. Her test results showed she had one of the most aggressive forms of breast cancer, with a high recurrence rate and low survival rate. The following six months of chemotherapy treatments included five hospitalizations, the loss of her hair, and the inability to care for herself or her children. To make a gut-wrenching situation worse, her insurance company denied coverage for treatment multiple times, leading to delays in her care. (Vitaglione, 2/4)
More health industry news 鈥
The US Department of Health and Human Services is investigating four unnamed medical schools over alleged antisemitism that took place during graduation ceremonies last year. 鈥淭he review will specifically examine whether the institutions acted with deliberate indifference regarding events that may have impacted Jewish students鈥 rights to access educational opportunities and benefits,鈥 HHS鈥 Office for Civil Rights said in a statement Monday. (Muller, 2/4)
The Ensign Group has completed the acquisition of five nursing home properties in Texas, the company announced Monday. The San Juan Capistrano, California-based company said in a news release it completed the acquisitions for undisclosed sums in two separate deals. (Eastabrook, 2/3)
Molina Healthcare said Monday it closed its purchase of ConnectiCare. The deal adds 140,000 Medicare, exchange and commercial enrollees to Molina鈥檚 portfolio, Molina said in a news release. It also allows the insurer to expand into Connecticut. (Tepper, 2/3)
Baxter announced Monday the abrupt retirement of President and CEO Jos茅 Almeida. Almeida also stepped down from the board, which he chaired. Lead independent director Brent Shafer was named chair and interim CEO. Almeida will act as an adviser through Oct. 31. (Dubinsky, 2/3)
A year ahead of the implementation of a mandatory Medicare payment demonstration, hospitals are on the lookout for post-acute care providers that can help them prevent lost reimbursements. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services finalized the Transforming Episode Accountability Model, or TEAM, in August. It takes effect in 2026 and runs for five years. TEAM sets payments for 30-day episodes of care for lower-extremity joint replacements, femur fracture surgeries, spinal fusions, coronary artery bypass grafts and major bowel procedures. (Early, 2/3)
Also 鈥
Oura is planning to deliver health insights to its customers using AI that runs locally on the smartphones of owners of its smart rings. By running its models on the phone rather than relying on a cloud-based service, Oura CEO Tom Hale tells Axios says it can better protect customers' privacy. (Fried, 2/4)