UnitedHealth Group Inc. kicked off the second-quarter earnings season for life and health insurers Tuesday by releasing earnings that were fine. The Minnetonka, Minnesota-based company reported $3 billion in net income for the quarter on $56 billion in revenue, compared with $2.4 billion in net income on $50 billion in revenue for the second quarter of 2017. The company — which presents itself as a data analysis company, and a manager and improver of health care, but still gets about 79% of its revenue from insuring people against health risk — ended the quarter providing or administering health coverage for 49 million people, up from 47 million people a year earlier. (Related: UnitedHealth Leaves You Off Its Emphasis List) Here's what happened to enrollment in key coverage categories:
- Commercial, fully insured group plan enrollment in the United States increased to 7.9 million, from 7.8 million.
- International medical enrollment increased to 6 million, from 4.1 million.
- Medicare Advantage plan enrollment increased to 4.8 million, from 4.3 million.
- Medicaid plan enrollment increased to 6.7 million, from 6.4 million.
- The number of Medicare supplement insurance insureds, or Medigap insureds, increased to 4.5 million, from 4.4 million.
- The number of individual major medical insureds fell to 480,000, from 540,000, in part because of the company's retreat from the Affordable Care Act public exchange system.
NOT FOR REPRINT
© Arc, All Rights Reserved. Request academic re-use from www.copyright.com. All other uses, submit a request to TMSalesOperations@arc-network.com. For more information visit Asset & Logo Licensing.