ap

Skip to content

Breaking News

United Healthcare and HealthOne standoff may force patients to find new doctors

The contract between the insurance provider and hospital system ends Sept. 1

Presbyterian/St. Luke's Medical Center on April 23, 2020 in Denver. The facility is one of eight hospitals that could go out of network if UnitedHealthcare and HealthOne can’t reach an agreement on rates by Sept. 1, 2024, when their current contract ends. (Photo By Kathryn Scott/Special to The Denver Post)
Presbyterian/St. Luke’s Medical Center on April 23, 2020 in Denver. The facility is one of eight hospitals that could go out of network if UnitedHealthcare and HealthOne can’t reach an agreement on rates by Sept. 1, 2024, when their current contract ends. (Photo By Kathryn Scott/Special to The Denver Post)
DENVER, CO - MARCH 7:  Meg Wingerter - Staff portraits at the Denver Post studio.  (Photo by Eric Lutzens/The Denver Post)
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:
Getting your player ready...

The HealthOne hospital system and UnitedHealthcare are locked in a dispute over rates, which could force patients to find new doctors if they can’t reach an agreement.

When a health system and an insurance company agree on rates, the system is “in-network,” meaning patients don’t pay as much out-of-pocket when they use its hospitals or clinics. If they can’t agree and the system goes “out-of-network,” patients have to choose whether to pay more to continue using the system, or to find new providers. Patients who have an emergency could still go to the nearest hospital, even if it is no longer in-network, without facing higher charges.

HealthOne’s contract with United Healthcare ends Sept. 1. If they don’t settle a contract or agree to an extension by then, patients insured by United would pay more to use:

• Centennial Hospital

• North Suburban Medical Center

• Presbyterian/St. Luke’s Medical Center

• Rocky Mountain Hospital for Children

• Rose Medical Center

• Sky Ridge Medical Center

• Swedish Medical Center

• The Medical Center of Aurora

United accused HealthOne of asking for an “unreasonable” double-digit increase in rates, which it said would drive up the cost of health insurance. It said customers could still use eight hospitals owned by other systems, as well as their affiliated clinics, if negotiations are unsuccessful.

HealthOne said United “mischaracterized” its position and was offering rates below what is typical in the Denver market. A statement from the health system said it intends to keep negotiating.

If HealthOne goes out-of-network, some patients could stay with their current doctors temporarily, including those who are pregnant and those who were just diagnosed with cancer or are undergoing treatment. Others would have to seek care from one of eight other hospitals that are in-network.

Health systems and insurers usually reach an agreement before their contracts expire, but CommonSpirit Health left Anthem BlueCross BlueShield of Colorado’s network for almost three weeks earlier this year while they continued bargaining over rates. UCHealth also went out-of-network with certain Anthem plans for one year in 2021.

Both sides of the current dispute are giants. United is the in the commercial and Medicare Advantage markets, while Tennessee-based HCA Healthcare, which owns the HealthOne hospitals, is the .

RevContent Feed

More in Health