UCare wasn't the only health plan that made money last year after a rough 2016, but not many companies have the sort of recent history it does. Maybe the remarkable thing is that the nonprofit health insurer was even alive in 2017 as an independent company.
As a quick refresher, the loss of business from the state of Minnesota meant its revenue for 2016 was cut in half from the year before. With that kind of plunge, UCare executives had to cut costs to survive, of course. But there are lessons to be learned here about how they went about it.
"Leveraging the culture of commitment" to plan members, health care providers and employees is how CEO Mark Traynor explained how UCare approached its financial crisis. Another way to put it is that Traynor and his colleagues managed to keep UCare recognizably UCare, even after letting go of a couple hundred employees.
Among other things, that meant the experience of members in its health plans had to be the same if not better and front-line employees had to continue to think of UCare as an organization with a purpose beyond a place to pick up a paycheck.
A mission orientation characterizes a lot of health care in Minnesota, even though we're talking about multibillion-dollar nonprofits with complex operations. UCare is far from the biggest, too. Its revenue last year of $2.7 billion was only about 10 percent of the combined revenue of the state's seven nonprofit health insurers.
Minneapolis-based UCare was launched in the 1980s by University of Minnesota physicians who were looking for a stable health plan to serve some of their poorest patients. UCare became known for serving people in government-sponsored programs, though it also covers others and has sold on the MNsure exchange.
Health plans count members as a basic measure of size. UCare's membership had surged in recent years, ending 2015 at nearly 500,000. By then, its leaders were already dealing with a crisis after losing a bidding process to keep members in two state-run programs with more than 360,000 people.
UCare ended 2016 with just 152,000 members. It turned out to have had an extreme case of customer concentration risk — a business term for having too many eggs in one basket.