Competition levels drop for health insurance markets across 25 states

| 4 Min Read

CHICAGO — Half of all states had commercial health insurance markets that were less competitive in 2017 than during the previous year, based on data from a newly updated study of competition in the U.S. health insurance industry issued by the American Medical Association (AMA).

“The AMA continues to urge that competition, not consolidation, is the right prescription for health insurance markets,” said AMA President Barbara L. McAneny, M.D. “The slide toward insurance monopolies has created a market imbalance that disadvantages patients and favors powerful health insurers. The prospect of future mergers involving health insurance companies should raise serious antitrust concerns. There is already too little competition among insurers, to the detriment of patients. Networks are already too narrow, and premiums are already too high.”

 

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

Doctor with text bubbles and graphic elements

Deepfake “doctors” are a problem—here are 7 keys to stopping them

| 4 Min Read
Light bulb with

How to bring physician well-being initiatives to life

| 14 Min Read
Healthcare worker in empty hospital operating room

These physician specialties score highest on resident well-being

| 11 Min Read
Train passenger distressed by motion sickness

What doctors wish patients knew about motion sickness

| 10 Min Read