5 reactions to Aetna-Humana ruling

In a 156-page opinion, U.S. District Judge John Bates ruled in favor of the Justice Department and blocked Hartford, Conn.-based Aetna's proposed $37 billion takeover of Louisville, Ky.-based Humana over antitrust concerns.

In his ruling, Judge Bates determined Medicare Advantage and traditional Medicare should not be considered the same market. Therefore, the deal would violate antitrust laws as Aetna and Humana would have an "unlawful" Medicare Advantage market share in 364 counties across 21 states. In terms of public exchange markets, Judge Bates ruled the deal would be anticompetitive in 17 counties across 3 states, and Aetna's withdrawal from the public exchange in the 17 complaint counties "was to avoid antitrust scrutiny [and] the Court gives that evidence little weight."

Here are five reactions from healthcare leaders, litigators and company spokespersons regarding the judge's decision.

1. American Medical Association President Andrew Gurman, MD, issued a statement on behalf of the association applauding the decision. Dr. Gurman said the "court's ruling sets a notable legal precedent by recognizing Medicare Advantage as a separate and distinct market that does not compete with traditional Medicare. This was a view advocated by the AMA, as well as leading economists. AMA also applauds the decision for protecting competition on the public exchanges."

2. Matthew Cantor, partner at Constantine Cannon, told Becker's Hospital Review he thought the decision of whether Medicare Advantage and original Medicare should be considered the same market was never "a real significant dispute." However, he found it interesting Judge Bates gave little weight to Aetna's argument that its exit from ACA exchanges in the 17 complaint counties was a business decision. He said it "may have hurt Aetna's creditability with the court."

In terms of Aetna's possible appeal of the ruling, Mr. Cantor said while as a matter of law the ruling will be hard to reverse, the "most important part now is how the Trump administration is going to react to this. I would think they would be receptive and listen to what the merging parties have to say, particularly if it scores them political points on the repeal and replacement of the ACA."

3. Randal Schultz, a partner at Lathrop & Gage and chair of the firm's healthcare strategic business planning practice group, told Becker's Hospital Review he thought the judge's ruling was logical and an easy decision. He said should Aetna successfully appeal the deal and it does go through, his hope is the court requires the insurers to "disclose financial information about the actual cost of care. By putting requirements on merged groups to release actual healthcare costs … it opens up a black box [and] people will know what it actually costs to insure a population." Doing so would push more employers toward self-insuring their workers, he said.

Regarding the looming decision of Indianapolis-based Anthem's proposed $54 billion acquisition of Bloomfield, Conn.-based Cigna, Mr. Schultz added, "I'll be shocked if the other case doesn't come down the same way."

4. Aetna spokesperson T.J. Crawford said immediately after the ruling was released, "We're reviewing the opinion now and giving serious consideration to an appeal after putting forward a compelling case."

5. On Tuesday, Aetna Chairman and CEO Mark Bertolini and Humana CEO Bruce Broussard issued a joint statement: "After putting forward a compelling case that addressed each of the Department of Justice concerns, we are disappointed with the court's decision and will carefully consider all available options. We continue to believe a combined company will create access to higher-quality and more affordable care, and deliver a better overall experience for those we serve."

Mr. Bertolini and Mr. Broussard added each company will remain focused on its current operating plan while working through potential outcomes. "Members should continue to expect the same high-quality products and services that have come to define both companies," they said.

This article was updated at 9:07 a.m. to include comments from Aetna and Humana.

 

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