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Amerigroup expands into its own back
yard
by Marjolijn Bijlefeld
Virginia Business
September 2005
Amerigroup Corp. finally has a chance
to show its home state what it can do to control Medicaid
costs. After 10 years of operating in other states,
Virginia Beach-based Ameri-group began enrolling Northern
Virginia Medicaid patients in its managed-care program
this month. The opportunity came because Virginia is
expanding its 9-year-old Medicaid managed-care enrollment.
Amerigroup and UniCare Health Plan
will both serve the Northern Virginia market. Later
this year, when the state enrolls residents in the Winchester
and surrounding areas, Amerigroup will be among four
providers. The others are Anthem, Optima Family Care
and Virginia Premier.
In serving more than 1 million people
in eight states and the District of Columbia, Amerigroup
has been able to save money for state governments with
its emphasis on preventive care (treating ailments before
a health crisis) rather than on simply paying the bills
for more costly urgent care.
In a July 2004 report to America’s
Health Insurance Plans, the Lewin Group — a health-care
policy consulting firm in Falls Church — analyzed
states with Medicaid managed-care programs. In Ohio,
for example, inpatient costs decreased 27 percent under
Medicaid managed care. In Wisconsin, the savings were
estimated at nearly 11 percent. In Maryland, where demonstration
projects must not increase state spending, the savings
from Medicaid managed care were used to expand enrollment,
which grew from 355,000 in 1999 to almost 470,000 as
of January 2004. Similar cost savings would certainly
be welcome in Virginia, where Medicaid consumes nearly
$4 billion of the state’s budget every year.
Heading Amerigroup’s Virginia
program is Dr. Sandra Nichols, a family physician by
training. She practiced medicine in rural Arkansas and
was the state health commissioner under two governors
there before becoming medical director for the Mid-Atlantic
region of United Healthcare. She joined Amerigroup in
June 2004 as CEO of Amerigroup District of Columbia,
a position she still holds. “I was totally impressed
by what Amerigroup was doing for the Medicaid population,”
she says.
In Northern Virginia, 24,000 Medicaid
patients, mostly young mothers and children, have been
assigned to Amerigroup. They will be getting phone calls,
most likely from the 450 workers in Ameri-group’s
call center in Virginia Beach. (There’s a second
call center with 100 people in Tampa, Fla.) “We’ll
do health evaluations on the phone,” explains
Nichols. “We’ll ask whether they have a
health problem or whether their children have been immunized.
We’ll ask when they last saw a doctor. We’ll
help them make appointments, and we’ll work with
them on transportation.”
Open-ended questions such as “Are
you feeling well right now?” can begin to identify
conditions that patients may not even know they have.
If the patients don’t speak English, Amerigroup
will arrange for interpreters to go with them to doctor’s
appointments. “When we get in with these early
case findings, we have remarkable outcomes,” says
Nichols. For example, 12 percent of all births nationwide
were premature last year. Among African Americans, that
rate was higher than 17 percent. Premature infants require
more intensive and costly hospital treatment at birth,
and they often continue to have severe health problems.
By providing more hands-on support and encouraging women
on Medicaid to get regular prenatal care, Amerigroup
was able to record a premature birth rate of just 7.6
percent for 36,000 childbirths last year.
Similarly, Amerigroup has shown its
effectiveness in working with asthma patients. In a
six-month period working with 777 patients with asthma,
Amerigroup made sure that they received at-home counseling
and access to medications. As a result, the company
paid more for prescriptions and doctor visits, but the
overall cost of treating these patients was 27 percent
lower than it was before they became part of Amerigroup’s
asthma control program. “The number of hospital
admissions and emergency room visits go way down,”
says Kent Jenkins, the company’s vice president
for communications.
With its North-ern Virginia program,
Amerigroup has introduced some unusual preventive care
concepts. Enrolled children between the ages of 6 and
18 get free memberships at a local Boys & Girls
Club, and older children are entitled to free sports
physicals. The idea is to keep children engaged and
active, not only to avoid obesity but also to steer
them away from poor lifestyle choices.
Amerigroup and similar Medicaid managed-care
companies make money by contracting with states to provide
health care at a certain cost. Health-care providers
who treat Medicaid patients enrolled in these programs
bill the company directly at contracted fees rather
than billing the state through Medicaid. Inova Health
System anchors the Northern Virginia provider panel.
Jenkins says that Amerigroup pays providers at rates
equal to or greater than Medicaid fees. “We’re
not about shifting costs; we’re about changing
behaviors,” he says.
As a publicly traded company for
the past four years (NYSE: AGP), Amerigroup has had
to show its mettle on Wall Street as well as at state
capitols. Chairman and CEO Jeffrey L. McWaters encountered
skepticism to the company’s approach when he founded
it 10 years ago. McWaters was raised in Paducah, Ky.,
by parents who taught him that not everyone was as lucky
as he was. He spent his early career creating managed
health programs in senior leadership positions at CIGNA
and Options Mental Health, now ValueOptions. It frustrated
him that so many challenges seemed to stand between
the needy and health care. He wanted to stop the cycle
of too little health care, too late.
Amerigroup, he says, provides a “win-win-win.
Members are getting better care. We’re accountable
to states and taxpayers. We’re providing jobs
in our communities and profit for our shareholders.”
Company revenues topped $1.8 billion last year, netting
$86 million in profit.
But health care is a volatile industry.
In July, the company had to revise its annual earnings
guidance down to $1.73 to $1.78 per diluted share from
its previous guidance of $1.90 to $1.98. The causes
included the company’s startup costs in expanded
regions and extra expense from a flu season last winter
that was longer and more severe than predicted. Still,
Amerigroup’s stock, which opened at $17 in November
2001, began bouncing back into the mid $30s shortly
after the announcement.
Managed care can strike a balance
between the rising health-care needs of low-income people
and increasing pressures to hold down state spending
and taxes, says McWaters. “Our members get better
access to care, more appropriate care with the integration
of social and behavioral health services and transportation,”
he observes. “It’s better than the 1960s
version of Medicaid that held no one accountable.”
With only a few states as clients,
there is plenty of room for Amerigroup to grow. It recently
signed a contract with Georgia to begin serving low-income
residents in January. McWaters also expects the company
to continue to boost enrollment from the Medicaid populations
of Virginia and other states. In addition, Amerigroup
offers three other insurance programs. One new product
is for low-income, uninsured working people. Another
program is for children and the third is for aged, blind
or disabled people, many of whom are eligible for both
Medicaid and Medicare. “We’re pleased that
we’re now operating in our home state. It was
just a matter of timing,” McWaters says. |