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If Walmart can’t do primary care profitably…who can?
Morning Brew May 08, 2024

Healthcare Brew

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In today’s edition:

🛒 Walmart woes

Medicaid unwinding

—Maia Anderson, Neelam Bohra

WE’RE IN BIZ

Lessons learned

Walmart CEO Doug McMillon speaks onstage Walmart CEO Doug McMillon, Ethan Miller/Getty Images

Walmart’s decision to shutter its Walmart Health initiative at the end of April left some healthcare industry experts wondering: If Walmart—the largest company in the world by revenue—can’t profitably operate primary care clinics, who can?

Well, according to Hal Andrews, president and CEO of healthcare analytics firm Trilliant Health, the retail giant likely made the decision not because it couldn’t figure out how to sustainably run the clinics, but because executives realized that other facets of the healthcare industry—including services like immunizations and specialty pharmacy—are much more profitable.

In a press release announcing the health initiative’s closure, Walmart executives said a “challenging reimbursement environment and escalating operating costs create a lack of profitability that make the care business unsustainable for us at this time.”

But given Walmart’s scale, it’s “unbelievable” that the company couldn’t make money operating its 51 primary care clinics, which were predominantly located in rural areas, Andrews told Healthcare Brew.

Keep reading here.—MA

Do you work in healthcare or have information about the industry that we should know? Email Quinn at [email protected]. For confidential conversations, ask Quinn for their number on Signal.

   

FROM THE CREW

Your burning questions about work, answered

The Crew

Is it okay to ask your co-worker how much they make? Is Gen Z set up for failure in the workplace? Should you really bring your whole self to work? Each week on Per My Last Email, Morning Brew’s resident career experts, Kaila and Kyle—whose careers have collectively spanned the corporate, government, nonprofit, and startup sectors—debate the trickiest challenges in work life and share insightful (and sometimes hilarious) tactics on how to overcome them.

Listen now.

PAYERS

Children losing

A stethoscope next to a ball of yarn unravelling Amelia Kinsinger

It’s the first anniversary of the Medicaid unwinding for many states, a process that kicked off when federal rules that had kept people on Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) through the pandemic expired. And while states could redetermine eligibility again, things have “unwound” more than some experts predicted. Children were kicked off the rolls at higher rates than adults, according to a new study the Urban Institute released May 2. Twelve states—Montana, Iowa, South Dakota, Alabama, Idaho, Georgia, Texas, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Florida, Mississippi, Colorado—exceeded 100% of their total projections for disenrolling children.

Eight states—South Dakota, New Hampshire, Texas, Arkansas, Iowa, Idaho, Montana, and Oklahoma—also exceeded 100% of their total projections for disenrolling both adults and children.

Experts following the process expected to see some states with more disenrollments, but they didn’t realize so many of those losing coverage would be children, Katherine Hempstead, a senior policy advisor at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, said.

Keep reading here.—NB

Do you work in healthcare or have information about the industry that we should know? Email Neelam at [email protected]. For confidential conversations, ask Neelam for her number on Signal.

   

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VITAL SIGNS

A laptop tracking vital signs is placed on rolling medical equipment. Francis Scialabba

Today’s top healthcare reads.

Stat: $300 million over three years. That’s how much the charitable organizations Novo Nordisk Foundation, The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and Wellcome reportedly will commit to look at the interconnectivity between big issues like climate change and political instability—and how these in turn impact everything from infectious diseases to nutrition and overall health. (Financial Times)

Quote: “I’m not saying this is an irreconcilable conflict, but the goals of regulators can conflict with the goals of bankruptcy.”—Laura Coordes, an Arizona State University law professor who studies hospital bankruptcy, on the relationship between regulators, the Steward Health Care system, and one of Steward’s landlords, Medical Properties Trust, after Steward filed for Chapter 11 (WSJ)

Read: Can menopause be canceled? On the fringes of evolutionary biology, there is an idea floating around that because women are having children later in life and are healthier in general, menopause might, according to one expert, come later...or not at all. (The Atlantic)

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