Industry condolences, social media vitriol follow UnitedHealthcare CEO’s killing

Industry condolences, social media vitriol follow UnitedHealthcare CEO’s killing


This audio is auto-generated. Please let us know if you have feedback.

A broad range of leaders in the healthcare industry expressed shock and sadness following the killing of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson in New York City on Wednesday.

Yet the sympathy voiced by Thompson’s peers was difficult to find among others. Many people on social media sites such as X published posts ranging in nature from unfeeling to outright vicious, suggesting hostility for health insurance companies and the executives who run them.

Thompson, 50, was killed yesterday morning in what New York Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch described as a “brazen, targeted attack.” The executive was shot multiple times by a masked man outside the Hilton hotel in midtown Manhattan around 6:40 a.m. ET, before the start of UnitedHealth’s investor conference. Emergency responders rushed Thompson to a hospital, but he was soon pronounced dead.

Three police stand on the sidewalk scene of Brian Thompson's killing surrounded by yellow caution tape.

Police place bullet casing markers outside of a Hilton Hotel in midtown Manhattan where United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson was fatally shot.

Spencer Platt via Getty Images

 

A manhunt is still underway for the assailant, who fled into Central Park. The shooter’s motivations remain unclear, but new details suggest Thompson’s tragic killing may be linked to anger against health insurers for restricting access to healthcare.

Thompson’s widow, Paulette, told NBC News that her husband had received threats related to a lack of coverage. The words “deny,” “delay,” “defend” and “depose” may have been found on round and shell casings found at the scene, according to conflicting reporting from CNN, ABC News and the Associated Press, all of which cited police sources.

It’s unclear if the words are related to “delay, deny, defend,” a phrase often used to criticize health insurers for tactics used to avoid paying out claims, allegedly to inflate profits.

By some metrics, customer satisfaction with health insurers has been rising. People tend to think favorably of their own health insurance, though a majority experience problems when they need to use it, according to a survey last year by health policy firm the KFF.

However, other surveys have found anger directed at payers for high healthcare costs: Of adults who agreed medical spending is too high, 90% said insurers bear at least a fair amount of blame, according to separate KFF research from 2019.

And public ire against health insurers seems to be increasing over widespread claims denials and delays of care, often due to a process called prior authorization that requires providers to get an insurer’s permission before performing a medical service.

UnitedHealthcare has borne the brunt of much of the criticism as the largest private insurer in the U.S.

The company, a division of healthcare behemoth UnitedHealth Group, provides medical insurance to 50.7 million Americans, including 7.8 million in Medicare Advantage plans. UnitedHealthcare is the largest issuer of the privatized coverage, which is increasingly popular among seniors but has been criticized for costing taxpayers more in return for less generous coverage than traditional Medicare.

In October, a Senate committee released a report slamming MA insurers, including UnitedHealthcare, for using algorithms to sharply increase the rate of claims denials between 2019 and 2022. UnitedHealthcare has also been sued over its alleged use of the technology to deny claims.

UnitedHealth is also reportedly being investigated by the Department of Justice over anticompetitive concerns.

Social media exploded on Wednesday. Thompson’s death quickly started trending on X and was discussed on Reddit. Many of the posts expressed contempt for health insurers. Some even delighted in Thompson’s killing, spurring X to remove some of the most egregious posts.

However, on career-focused networking site LinkedIn, a flood of executives — many of whom have interacted with Thompson over his two-decade career in healthcare — extended condolences to Thompson’s family and his employer. UnitedHealth employees also published remembrances of their colleague.

A headshot of Brian Thompson, the late CEO of UnitedHealthcare

UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson

Courtesy of UnitedHealth

 

Thompson first joined Minnesota-based UnitedHealth in 2004 as a director of corporate development before rising up the ranks in a variety of insurance and financial leadership roles, according to his LinkedIn. The executive, a graduate of the University of Iowa, was appointed as CEO of UnitedHealthcare in April 2021.

Under his leadership, UnitedHealthcare invested heavily in expanding its value-based offerings, including MA.

Other insurance, provider and pharmaceutical groups, along with some members of Congress, also issued statements sharing shock and sadness at the news.

Here is a roundup of industry reactions to Thompson’s passing. It will be updated as needed.





Source link