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Mergers escalate pace of US healthcare consolidation | Mergers escalate pace of US healthcare consolidation |
(35 minutes later) | |
Americans will have just three big companies to choose their health insurance from rather than five if the latest deals get the go ahead. | Americans will have just three big companies to choose their health insurance from rather than five if the latest deals get the go ahead. |
US healthcare firm Anthem said it would pay $54bn (£35bn) to buy smaller rival Cigna in a move aimed at slashing costs. | US healthcare firm Anthem said it would pay $54bn (£35bn) to buy smaller rival Cigna in a move aimed at slashing costs. |
The biggest healthcare insurer in the US will be created by the historic deal, the largest in the sector. | The biggest healthcare insurer in the US will be created by the historic deal, the largest in the sector. |
The tie-up comes weeks after Aetna said it would buy rival Humana for $37bn. | The tie-up comes weeks after Aetna said it would buy rival Humana for $37bn. |
If they are approved by regulators, the two mega-deals would transform the US healthcare industry, consolidating the country's five biggest health insurers to just three, including UnitedHealth. | If they are approved by regulators, the two mega-deals would transform the US healthcare industry, consolidating the country's five biggest health insurers to just three, including UnitedHealth. |
Forrester analyst Alex Cullen said the deals are being driven by the "huge pressure" on healthcare firms to reduce costs. | Forrester analyst Alex Cullen said the deals are being driven by the "huge pressure" on healthcare firms to reduce costs. |
"The landscape has changed completely. Firms are now competing to be the 'Amazon' of the healthcare sector. It's a much more consumer-orientated landscape, " he said. | "The landscape has changed completely. Firms are now competing to be the 'Amazon' of the healthcare sector. It's a much more consumer-orientated landscape, " he said. |
Forcing efficiency | Forcing efficiency |
The deal frenzy comes in the wake of rapid change, largely linked to "Obamacare" - President Obama's Affordable Care Act. | The deal frenzy comes in the wake of rapid change, largely linked to "Obamacare" - President Obama's Affordable Care Act. |
The 2010 law was aimed at extending health insurance care to all Americans, including those not covered by their employers, as well as the poor and the elderly. | The 2010 law was aimed at extending health insurance care to all Americans, including those not covered by their employers, as well as the poor and the elderly. |
But the conditions it has imposed on insurance firms, such as banning them from denying health coverage to people with pre-existing health conditions and allowing young people to remain on their parents' plans until the age of 26, is forcing them to become more efficient. | But the conditions it has imposed on insurance firms, such as banning them from denying health coverage to people with pre-existing health conditions and allowing young people to remain on their parents' plans until the age of 26, is forcing them to become more efficient. |
The law has also resulted in marketplaces - with websites akin to online travel and shopping sites - where individuals can compare prices as they shop for coverage, which have also added to pressure to minimise costs. | The law has also resulted in marketplaces - with websites akin to online travel and shopping sites - where individuals can compare prices as they shop for coverage, which have also added to pressure to minimise costs. |
Merging will give the firms better negotiating powers with drug companies, but critics say the smaller number of providers mean that consumers could end up paying more. | Merging will give the firms better negotiating powers with drug companies, but critics say the smaller number of providers mean that consumers could end up paying more. |
"The business motives are relatively obvious, but we don't know yet if it's good for consumers," said Mr Cullen. | "The business motives are relatively obvious, but we don't know yet if it's good for consumers," said Mr Cullen. |
The US spent $2.5 trillion - or 17.4% of GDP - on health care in 2013, according to official figures. Per capita the figure has risen from $4,129 in 2000 to $7,826 in 2013. |
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