As companies weather economic shocks from COVID-19, UnitedHealth Group says it's taking steps to shore-up the U.S. market for employer-sponsored health plans, the type of coverage that's the single most common source of health insurance in the country.
Executives at the Minnetonka-based health care giant told investors Wednesday they expect a shift in coverage from employer health plans to government-financed programs such as Medicaid, although they didn't forecast the magnitude of the change.
To stem the tide, the company's UnitedHealthcare division is granting payment plans to more customers. Executives also are considering premium rebates because health plans right now are saving so much money from the shutdown of elective surgeries to conserve supplies for COVID-19 patients.
For now, the savings are covering the cost of treating patients who are sickened in the pandemic, said David Wichmann, the chief executive at UnitedHealth Group.
"Employers are having to furlough employees. They have no revenues today," Wichmann said. "They need and want to keep people in coverage."
"It very well could be that under the circumstances, deferrals of services outweigh COVID-19 costs," Wichmann said, adding: "We very well may find ourselves in a position where we could provide additional premium relief to those clients."
First quarter results released Wednesday show UnitedHealth Group has absorbed little immediate damage thus far from the economic effects of the outbreak. The company also announced that one of its top executives, Andrew Witty, will temporarily leave the firm to help the World Health Organization develop a vaccine against the coronavirus.
UnitedHealth Group is Minnesota's largest company by revenue and employs 18,000 people in the state. UnitedHealth said it is paying full wages to its workforce of 325,000 people, and has boosted pay for front-line caregivers.