UnitedHealth Q1 results: Change cyberattack in focus

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UnitedHealth Group’s first-quarter earnings call will mark the health care giant’s first major public comments since a cyberattack on its Change Healthcare billing and payments subsidiary in February, which has led to the largest disruption in U.S. health care since the Covid pandemic.

“Everybody looks to United as the bellwether of all of healthcare services. This will be different,” said Lisa Gill, managing director and health care analyst at JPMorgan.   

The data breach at the Change Healthcare unit forced the firm to take down its massive billing and payment processing service. While the company has restored services for pharmacies, the outage has continued to disrupt operations for health care providers across the country.

Change Healthcare is a subsidiary of UnitedHealth’s sprawling Optum division, which includes 90,000 doctors under the Optum Care unit and one of the nation’s largest pharmacy benefits managers, OptumRx.

Analysts will be looking for how the company accounts for the costs associated with the cyberattack as well as the impact of the outage on other operations within Optum’s businesses.

“We will be very interested in the charge that they’re going to be incurring … in terms of how they’re estimating either lost revenue or additional expenses,” said Scott Fidel, managing director and health care analyst at Stephens.

UnitedHealth says it has provided $4.7 billion in no-interest loans to providers, though the American Medical Association says more than half of physician groups surveyed in early April said they’d had to use personal loans to maintain operations.

One such physician, Nashville dermatologist James Allred, said he’s had to take out loans to keep his practice, Wellskin Dermatology & Aesthetics, afloat because he’s been unable to get claims processed and paid by private health insurers. The last six weeks have forced to him to give up on plans to expand his practice this year.

“For one single hack to disrupt the entire American healthcare industry… brings a lot of questions about how healthy is it, from a system standpoint, to have this massive consolidation?” Allred said.

Larger providers, like home infusion services firm Option Care Health, have also warned that the outage could impact their quarterly results.

Medicare Advantage uncertainty  

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