July 13, 2026
Reporter, Health Care Inc. Writer

I first visited a Buc-ee’s a few years ago in Kentucky on a road trip. It’s a melting pot of American culture and consumerism (with a really good cherry limeade pop). It’s also apparently an aggressive trademark litigator over its beaver mascot. Take a pit stop and share your news and tips here: bob.herman@statnews.com.

UnitedHealth

[Tim Robinson voice] You sure about that?

UNH HQ - Jenn Ackerman

Jenn Ackerman for STAT

UnitedHealth Group was happy to promote a new audit that said nearly all of the diagnoses recorded for its Medicare Advantage members during home visits (97%) were justified by medical records. But the results are not nearly as clean, or useful, as the company suggests.

The 12-page report — dated June 18, with no listed authors, and not released until last week — walks through the methodology. FTI Consulting, which health insurers have hired to author reports favorable to their causes, made this important disclaimer toward the end: “FTI’s review did not consider visits, and any related documentation, occurring outside of the HouseCalls Program.” 

In other words, UnitedHealth’s audit did not verify whether the codes documented in home visits were validated in follow-up care outside of the home visit. Everything is being graded against UnitedHealth’s trip to the home.

Federal watchdogs and independent researchers have found inappropriate coding practices in Medicare Advantage — specifically from so-called “health risk assessments” conducted in someone’s home. David Meyers of Brown University, one of those researchers who has studied the issue, said the 97% figure is “almost meaningless,” and the audit “seems designed to give [UnitedHealth] the results they want.” 

STAT was not invited to UnitedHealth’s media briefing on the report. In a statement, spokesperson Eric Hausman said: “FTI did not perform a clinical review or clinical validation audit,” consistent with government audits. “FTI’s coding review of HouseCalls focused on whether the diagnosis codes submitted accurately reflected the conditions identified and documented by the provider.”

UnitedHealth CEO Stephen Hemsley and other leaders have promised to be more transparent with the public and shareholders. But the materials released so far only paint a rosy view of the company, with findings that contradict government audits. Meanwhile, UnitedHealth has cut back on important public disclosures and crafted talking points to assuage shareholder unease.


medicare advantage

[DJ Khaled voice] Another one, and another one

Elevance Health was the first company to sue the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services over the agency’s updated 2026 star ratings. The next litigants have entered the chat. It’s plausible even more will be coming.

SCAN Health Plan filed its lawsuit last week, saying it was shorted $125 million. SCAN, like Elevance, argued CMS should have calculated its quality scores like it did for Clover Health, the insurer that won a crucial case in May. Alignment Healthcare followed with its own suit late Friday, saying CMS cost the company an extra $50 million.

SCAN also went philosophical, saying the Medicare Advantage star ratings program “went off the rails years ago.” It then quoted the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission — a group that insurers have tried to discredit — saying the program “is ‘overly complex,’ ‘distributes financial rewards inequitably,’ and ‘reports inaccurate information on quality.’”



health insurance

[Steve Urkel voice] Got any fees?

Screenshot 2026-07-09 at 1.47.25 PMMark Farrah Associates

Most employer health plans are “self-insured,” which means the employer sets aside money to pay for its workers’ medical and drug claims and then hires a health insurance company or third-party administrator to figure it all out. These are often called “administrative services only,” or ASO, contracts (we will get more into this in our employer health insurance series, I promise). 

The insurers and TPAs charge fees for these services, like creating networks and wiring money to hospitals and doctors. Those fees are substantial, at least in the aggregate. 

Analysts at Mark Farrah Associates found these fees totaled $23.6 billion across all Blue Cross Blue Shield plans in 2025. That’s mostly flat from 2024, but a 26% jump from 2021. You can see a summary of the analysis here.


hospitals

[Whitney Houston voice] I believe the PE investments are our future

My colleague Tara Bannow has an eagle eye and spotted this in a new financial filing from Children’s Health, a pediatric hospital system based in Dallas: As of Dec. 31, 2025, Children’s Health “had unfunded commitments to fund private equity investments totaling $394.8 million.” 

That’s up from roughly $255 million in 2022. Nonprofit children’s hospital or private equity partner? 

Read more: My old editor Merrill Goozner wrote about how nonprofit hospitals fund private equity firms a couple years ago.


More around STAT

Industry odds and ends

  • I was on CNBC’s “Squawk Box” last Friday talking about our Out of Pocket, Out of Reach series. You can watch the video here, and if you missed the start of the series last week, you can start with the first story.
  • Alignment Healthcare is facing a whistleblower lawsuit, in which a former senior executive is alleging the Medicare Advantage plan deliberately misclassified expenses so it could look profitable for investors. Alignment spokesperson Sabrina Rios said in a statement the “allegations are wholly without merit,” and a review conducted by an outside auditor concluded the former executive’s “concerns were unfounded and that the company’s accounting was appropriate.”
  • Ascension is buying Williamson Health, a hospital system in Tennessee, for roughly $1 billion, Alex Kacik of Modern Healthcare reports. The most interesting tidbit: UnitedHealth’s Optum was among the bidders. Optum doesn’t own any hospitals, and the company “pitched a strategic partnership that did not include a purchase price or capital investments,” Kacik writes. But this definitely goes beyond Optum’s usual interest in physician practices and surgery centers.
  • Tampa General Hospital sued Eli Lilly, alleging the drugmaker is illegally withholding federal discounts on several drugs through the government’s 340B program. It was only a matter of time before these lawsuits happened.
  • There is nothing novel about this new lawsuit between PHI Health, an air ambulance chain, and Priority Health, the health insurance arm of Corewell Health in Michigan. It’s just a reminder that the arbitration process created by the No Surprises Act continues to clog the courts with a seemingly unending amount of gripes — in this case, allegations that Priority Health isn’t paying what the arbitrator said PHI is owed.
  • Medicare and Medicaid spending on assisted living facilities was at least $12 billion in 2024, the Government Accountability Office found in a new report. The actual amount is almost certainly higher due to data limitations, and because the analysis didn’t include Medicare Advantage plans.

The Meme Ward

Health Care Inc. Meme - Issue 197



Thanks for reading! More next week. 

 
STAT
STAT, 1 Exchange Place, Boston, MA
©2026, All Rights Reserved.