WASHINGTON – The country's largest health insurer, UnitedHealth Group, received permission last week from federal regulators to buy about 225 medical clinics across the country. The purchase will add to a health care empire that already includes large medical groups in 10 states, a specialty pharmacy, a pharmacy benefits manager, 200 outpatient surgical facilities and a 20-state chain of urgent-care centers.
UnitedHealth, America's sixth-largest publicly traded company and Minnesota's biggest corporate citizen, is hardly alone in this health care trend. In 2018, Aetna health insurance merged with CVS Health, a huge national pharmacy chain. Another major health insurer, Cigna, merged with Express Scripts.
Big corporations buying different links in the health care chain — a process known as vertical integration — has set off antitrust alarms on Capitol Hill.
Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota has introduced two bills that will make it easier to monitor and challenge all kinds of mergers, especially vertical consolidations like those seen recently in the health care industry.
"We all know that corporate interests and consumer interests are often very different," Klobuchar said at a recent Senate subcommittee hearing on health system consolidation. "The stakes couldn't be higher. This is about nothing less than the future of health care in our country."
The health care corporations counter that they are consolidating services to streamline and make care delivery more effective and efficient.
"UnitedHealth Group delivers a wide range of comprehensive, coordinated health benefits and services to employers, individuals, and government agencies," a company spokesman said. "We work closely with more than 80 health plans, 67,000 pharmacies and 1.3 million physicians and other health care professionals to improve patient outcomes and experiences and lower costs."
The company did not address questions about Klobuchar's proposal for more rigorous scrutiny of vertical mergers.