AETNA TO RAISE FEES, CUT MEMBERSHIP
Now it looks to be making a similar - but smaller - move with a planned price increase for many of its customers in 2010.
The company figures it will lose between 600,000 and 650,000 members next year because of the price hikes.
In a conference call with investment analysts to discuss the company's third-quarter earnings, Chair and CEO Ron Williams told analysts, "The pricing we put in place for 2009 turned out to not really be what we needed to achieve the results and margins that we had historically been delivering."
Aetna President Mark Bertolini laid out how the company planned to raise prices to improve the company's profit margin. He said the firm had "implemented a combination of underwriting enhancements, pricing actions and plan design changes, intended to ensure that each customer is priced to an appropriate margin."
Laying out specific expected membership losses is "pretty candid," said David Gibbs, a retired health insurance industry consultant from
He said
Gibbs said simply raising prices probably would not get
Physicians for a National Health Plan - This act by
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"If they would rather die," said Scrooge, "then they had better go and do it, and decrease the surplus population."
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