Health outlook: Big stories to track now, with takeaways for your business
Few industries are as difficult to penetrate or complicated to report on as health insurance, but Christopher Snowbeckleads the way — breaking news and putting it into context that makes readers feel smarter. With hospitals in financial distress, insurance costs spiking and the standoff between the
You report on companies that are notoriously tight-lipped with the media. How do you get the scoops?
My sources are great. I have relationships with a lot of folks in and near the insurance industry. I’m also a dedicated reader of regulatory filings and audited financial statements, which is a throwback to studying medieval history at
Filings and financial statements provide tips. Sources help me understand these tips via conversation. It’s a process of discovery that I really enjoy — and I think sources recognize that I’m genuinely curious.
Were you expecting health costs to go up as much as they are trending for 2026?
Yes and no. Last fall, Mercer projected that employer health plan costs in 2026 would increase 6.5%, the biggest projected increase in 15 years. That’s a dramatic description of things. A more ho-hum approach is to say, the 6.5% increase this year isn’t that different than Mercer’s projected 6% increase going into 2025. And as
So, while I wasn’t surprised by a 6.5% increase, I’m adjusting my expectations for the corresponding financial pain. My sense is that base health care costs are so high now, a 6.5% increase today might well require more spending than a 12% increase did in 2002. I need to analyze this with a spreadsheet (another thing I love about reporting) and adjust for inflation, but I’m thinking there’s some truth in this idea.
A final note — trend gets confusing because we have multiple health insurance markets in this country where results can vary. Rates for health plans sold on MNsure, for example, are up much more than 6.5%. Plus, the realized cost trend for patients and individual consumers can have more to do with changes in funding by employers or the government than the health care trend itself. Isn’t this stuff exciting?
Last week’sCongressional grilling of
I think employers should be as transparent as possible with employees. Rather than simply announcing next year’s premiums, take the time to calculate the percent changes — don’t make workers look up the previous year’s rates and do the math themselves. If rates are going up 15% and HR hasn’t called this out, workers will be suspicious.
Also, many workers don’t know that employer subsidies with health plans are very large. Share the details. Assuming that employers in a bad year are sharing the financial pain alongside workers, it helps employees if they can see the math. If employers are visiting more pain on workers than the company, just put it out there and explain why. Clear is kind – especially when the news is lousy.
What should we know about the ongoing standoff between the
The impact to businesses and consumers is down the road. Yet it’s important to watch closely now, because detrimental changes that happen slowly at the U also are slow to reverse. One way to sum it up is the word “innovation.” A top-notch academic medical center recruits and retains physician scientists who develop new cures for patients and can help create and sustain companies in the regional economy. Uncertainty about the future could prompt physicians to leave
Theunraveling of UCare is another story you’ve reported on — what’s the takeaway from that situation?
I think we’re not quite there yet, in knowing the takeaway. Here are the two key questions I’m trying to answer: To what extent was the Medicaid business the problem at UCare vs. the Medicare Advantage business? And then, once trouble emerged, how quickly did management respond? Those answers should lead us to the moral of the story.
What health insurance stories are you expecting to be consequential in 2026?
I think the financial woes at
The UCare fallout will be a big story, too. I’m not sure if hospitals will be stuck with unpaid bills, but it’s important to watch. UCare enjoyed a lot of goodwill from patients and health care providers. Is that because the company was too generous in paying claims? Or was there a “secret sauce” the company found and employed for many years, only for things to go very bad at the end? About half a million people were covered by UCare last year. Where did they go? What will their arrival mean for the new health insurers?
Finally, UCare is a nonprofit that’s shutting down after growing too fast. Another local nonprofit, PreferredOne, is gone via acquisition after growing too fast about a decade ago. In that time span, UnitedHealthcare (for-profit) has been growing in
Yours is a beat that doesn’t seem to produce a lot of uplifting news. What keeps you motivated in covering this very complicated field that touches us all?
I started this conversation by saying: My sources are great. I should add that my readers are great, too. I’m getting more positive feedback than ever about my coverage, because I think we’re doing a better job of closely examining the problems people experience with the health care system.
Also, I’m lucky to work for
The CEOs speak:Following the weekend killing of
Target’s new board members:
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