AMA applauds court ruling upholding rejection of Anthem-Cigna merger

| 4 Min Read

The American Medical Association (AMA) today applauded the decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia upholding a lower court ruling halting the proposed $54 billion mega insurance merger between Anthem and Cigna. The AMA represented patient and physician voices, submitting an amicus brief to the appellate court in support of preserving the merger injunction issued in February. As the AMA has long observed, and as the trial court found, this merger would harm patients because it would likely lead to higher premiums, eliminate the existing head-to-head competition between Anthem and Cigna, reduce the number of national carriers from four to three, and diminish innovation. Unchallenged by today’s Court of Appeals ruling, these findings validate AMA’s ongoing concerns with highly concentrated health insurance markets.

“The appellate court sent a clear message to the health insurance industry: a merger that smothers competition and choice, raises premiums and reduces quality and innovation is inherently harmful to patients and physicians,” said AMA President Andrew W. Gurman, M.D. “The result of 21 months of advocacy before the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), congressional leaders, state attorneys general, insurance commissioners, and federal court, this outcome shows again that when doctors join together, the best outcome for patients and doctors can be achieved.”

Full press release available when you sign in

Sign in to the AMA website to get the full version of this press release. 

AMA membership has its advantages

  • Be a part of the nation's largest physician organization
  • Play a role in shaping the future of health care
  • Enjoy exclusive perks and savings

Not a member? Become a member now.

 

FEATURED STORIES

U.S. Capitol

In health care’s defining moment, AMA helps drive positive change

| 6 Min Read
Smiling woman sits on couch while typing on laptop

Medicare telehealth coverage renewed for two years

| 5 Min Read
Three businesspeople brainstorming together on a whiteboard in an office

Don’t miss out on this unique physician advocacy fellowship

| 4 Min Read
 Child standing in front of a shelf full of fresh products in a supermarket

What doctors wish patients knew about food allergies

| 13 Min Read