UnitedHealth Releases First External Review In Bid To Regain Public Trust
UnitedHealth has pledged to take close to two dozen specific actions across the areas in which the report found it lacking, including unresolved issues regarding patient care management, and prior authorizations. Plus, several Illinois hospitals with religious ties spurn medical aid-in-dying law.
UnitedHealth Group Inc. released the first outside reviews of its business practices 鈥 reports it commissioned that describe its policies as 鈥渞obust鈥 while pointing to ongoing problems in areas that have faced scrutiny. The health-care conglomerate cast Friday鈥檚 assessments from FTI Consulting Inc. and Analysis Group Inc. as early steps toward greater transparency across parts of its business that have drawn attention from regulators, the press and the public. (Tozzi, 12/19)
Though a new Illinois law allows doctors to help terminally ill people end their lives, several Illinois health systems with religious affiliations say they will not participate. OSF HealthCare, Ascension and Hospital Sisters Health System all say they will not take part in medical aid-in-dying. (Schencker, 12/19)
Minnesota regulators can assume control of distressed health insurance company UCare 鈥 but a health system in the state wants to intervene. A state district court judge Wednesday approved the Minnesota Department of Health鈥檚 request to enter UCare into rehabilitation. The nonprofit insurer is scheduled to shut down next year after local competitor Medica acquires its last lines of business. The deal is projected to close in the first half of 2026, pending regulatory approval. The rehabilitation will not interfere with the proposed deal. (Tepper, 12/19)
After a busy 2025, Function Health will place artificial intelligence at the centerpiece of its 2026 strategy. The company, which sells a subscription-based service that offers customers more than 160 lab tests and alerts them to potential medical problems, had an eventful year. In November, it launched Medical Intelligence Lab, a team of researchers, clinicians and technologists working to uncover a person鈥檚 unique biology by unifying data from lab testing, imaging, wearables, devices, and medical records. (Famakinwa, 12/19)
It鈥檚 not unusual for a 20-something to text Mom in a panic from the doctor鈥檚 office, seeking help answering a question. And patients of any age can struggle to recall all their medicines 鈥 or forget to mention a concern. Getting the most out of a doctor鈥檚 visit requires some advance preparation. Even the professionals plan ahead. (Neergaard, 12/19)