U.S. health insurer UnitedHealth said Tuesday it
would largely exit the Obamacare individual insurance market in 2017,
citing expectations for mounting losses from the program.
UnitedHealth is the largest U.S. health insurer
and one of the biggest sellers of plans on the exchanges, which were
created as part of President Barack Obama's national healthcare law.
UnitedHealth sells these plans in 34 states this year, up from 25 states
last year.
"Next year, we will remain in only a handful of
states," UnitedHealth CEO Stephen Hemsley said in prepared remarks as
part of the company's first-quarter earnings report.
Related: Will United's Exit Kill Obamacare?
The company warned investors late last year that
it was losing money on the new plans and might exit the market. On
Tuesday, the company raised its 2016 expectation for losses on the
exchanges by $125 million to $650 million.
UnitedHealth's Hemsley said that the shorter
term, higher risk profile of the new members, as well as the smaller
than expected enrollment, suggested UnitedHealth could not offer plans
on a sustained basis.
Other health insurers including Aetna Inc and
Anthem Inc are also large players on the exchanges. In recent months
they said they will continue to sell exchange plans.
Related: Nearly 17 Million Covered by Obamacare
The company has 795,000 customers from the
exchanges, more than half of them new to UnitedHealth, it said. It
expects about 650,000 members by year end.
The government said in February that
more than 12 million people had signed up for Obamacare-related insurance through
HealthCare.govor a state-based exchange as of Jan. 31. Previous government expectations had been for more than 20 million people.
0 Comments