UnitedHealth Bribes Nurses

United Health Bribery Update

In the weeks since the below article revealed allegations against UnitedHealth, members of Congress are calling for action. At least one US Senator and two Representatives are engaged in the allegations. Senator Wyden (D-OR) announced that his office is launching its own investigation. Senator Hawley (R-MO), who is on the investigations subcommittee said it was “alarming to hear these serious allegations. I look forward to securing justice for patients, policyholders, and whistleblowers alike who’ve been harmed by insurance companies.” Other Senators expressed similar sentiments.

“If these allegations are true, UnitedHealth must be held responsible for their gross abuse of patients. Patients should always come before profits.”

Buddy Carter

Chair of the House subcommittee on health, U.S. Representative, (R-GA)

Three U.S. Representatives, coming from both sides of the aisle, are calling on the DoJ to investigate. A letter to the DoJ reads:

“The Guardian’s findings reveal the need for a wide-ranging investigation by the Department of Justice into years, if not decades, of potential waste, fraud, and abuse at UnitedHealth.”

Here is another take on the breaking news story, published by whistlebloweraid.org

The Guardian has uncovered some truly disturbing information about UnitedHealth Group. As the investigation and reporting belongs to them, I have reprinted the first part of the article here. Read the full article here.

by George Joseph, The Guardian
Wed May 21, 2025

Revealed: UnitedHealth secretly paid nursing homes to reduce hospital transfers

A Guardian investigation finds insurer quietly paid facilities that helped it gain Medicare enrollees and reduce hospitalizations. Whistleblowers allege harm to residents

UnitedHealth Group, the nation’s largest healthcare conglomerate, has secretly paid nursing homes thousands in bonuses to help slash hospital transfers for ailing residents – part of a series of cost-cutting tactics that has saved the company millions, but at times risked residents’ health, a Guardian investigation has found.

UnitedHealth paid nursing homes

Those secret bonuses have been paid out as part of a UnitedHealth program that stations the company’s own medical teams in nursing homes and pushes them to cut care expenses for residents covered by the insurance giant.

In several cases identified by the Guardian, nursing home residents who needed immediate hospital care under the program failed to receive it, after interventions from UnitedHealth staffers. At least one lived with permanent brain damage following his delayed transfer, according to a confidential nursing home incident log, recordings and photo evidence.

“No one is truly investigating when a patient suffers harm. Absolutely no one,” said one current UnitedHealth nurse practitioner who recently filed a congressional complaint about the nursing home program. “These incidents are hidden, downplayed and minimized. The sense is: ‘Well, they’re medically frail, and no one lives for ever.’”

Confidential Investigation

The Guardian’s investigation is based on thousands of confidential corporate and patient records obtained through sources, public records requests and court files, interviews with more than 20 current and former UnitedHealth and nursing home employees, and two whistleblower declarations submitted to Congress this month through the non-profit legal group Whistleblower Aid.

The documents and sources provide a never-before-seen window into the company’s successful effort to insert itself into the day-to-day operations of nearly 2,000 nursing homes in small towns and urban commercial strips across the nation – an approach which has helped UnitedHealth secure a vast stream of federal dollars from Medicare Advantage plans that cover more than 55,000 long-term nursing home residents.

UnitedHealth Responds

UnitedHealth said the suggestion that its employees have prevented hospital transfers “is verifiably false”. It said its bonus payments to nursing homes help prevent unnecessary hospitalizations that are costly and dangerous to patients and that its partnerships with nursing homes improve health outcomes.

Long-Term Profit

UnitedHealth Profit over Patients

Under Medicare Advantage, insurers collect lump sums from the federal government to cover seniors’ care. But the less insurers spend on care, the more they have for potential profit – an opportunity that UnitedHealth higher-ups have systematically sought to exploit when it comes to long-term nursing home residents.

To reduce residents’ hospital visits, UnitedHealth has offered nursing homes an array of financial sweeteners that sounded more like they came from stockbrokers than medical professionals.

Seven Years of Bribery and Threats

Over the past seven years, the company has shelled out “Premium Dividend” and “Shared Savings” payments that boosted nursing homes’ bottom lines. Through its “Quality and Shared Risk” program, UnitedHealth offered an even bigger cut to nursing homes that drove down medical spending, but threatened to claw back money from those that didn’t, according to former employees and internal corporate documents.

“You gain profitability by denying care, and when profitability suffers for the shareholders, that’s when people get crazy and do things that are not appropriate.”

Anonymous

Former National Executive, United Health

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© 2025 This article is reprinted from The Guardian. The full article can be accessed here. For more information or for permission to reprint, please contact The Guardian directly.

New Deal to Sell HH & Hospice Agencies

by Kristin Rowan, Editor

UnitedHealth, Amedisys to Divest Home Health & Hospice...Again

History

UnitedHealth, Amedisys to divest home health and hospice properties to satisfy DOJ. Almost two years ago, the health services division of UnitedHealth Group, Optum, announced plans to by Amedisys. The purchase announcement came after Optum outbid Option Care Health with an unsolicited offer. The Department of Justice launched an anti-trust probe shortly after the announcement. To satisfy the DOJ, UnitedHealth and Amedisys plan to divest some of its businesses as part of the acquisition agreement.

Anti Anti-Trust

We previously reported that Amedisys entered into an agreement with VitalCaring to divest some of its home health and hospice locations. This agreement was meant to satisfy the DOJ concerns raised in its anti-trust lawsuit against Amedisys and UnitedHealth. 

In January of 2025, VitalCaring lost a lawsuit filed by Encompass Health and Enhabit and were ordered to pay 43% of all future profits to the two companies. In the wake of that court decision, VitalCaring pulled the agreement and signed a mutual release with UnitedHealth, with all parties walking away from the deal.

BrightSpring

BrightSpring Health Services is an $11.5B company with locations across the United States and employing more than 37,000 people. In January of this year, BrightSpring sold is Community Living Business to Sevita. BrightSprings intends to acquire additional properties, focusing on its home- and community-based businesses. According to the BrightSpring President and CEO Jon Rousseau, BrightSpring is “focused on getting to 3x leverage within the next two years.”

Amedisys operates in 38 states with more than 500 locations. The document Amedisys submitted to the SEC does not indicate how many of its properties and those of UnitedHealth will be divested. A UnitedHealth statement said the company plans to divest at least 128 home health and hospice facilities.

One has to wonder whether we are trading one monopoly for another.

BrightSpring Health Services

New Deal

As the DOJ lawsuit enters mediation this August, UnitedHealth and Amedisys search for another way to divest its properties. Enter the New Deal. BrightSpring Health Services, parent company to Adoration Home Health Acquisition LLC, Adoration Hospice Care Acquisitions LLC and Senescence LLC, DBA All Saints Hospice will purchase some of the properties from both Amedisys and UnitedHealth. The Pennant Group, parent company to Cornerstone Healthcare, Inc. and Tensaw River Healthcare, LLC, will purchase additional properties from bother companies.

According to documents submitted to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), both agreements have mulitple contingencies, including the finalization of the UnitedHealth/Amedisys merger. Financial information on the two deals was not included in the Amedisys SEC filing. In a separate filing, Pennant valued their part of the agreement at nearly $102.5 million.

No Deal Yet

The sale of properties to BrightSpring and Pennant Group relies on the finalization of the merger between Amedisys and UnitedHealth. A magistrate will oversee mediation between the two companies and the DOJ beginning this August.

The SEC and the DOJ have not yet responded to the intent to divest to BrightSpring and Pennant Group.

Final Thoughts

The proposed merger between UnitedHealth and Amedisys has been ongoing for two years. The two companies, who previously stated their competition helped keep them honest and keep costs low, now state that the merger will lower costs even more. The DOJ disagrees. To alleviate concerns, the merger includes the release of properties anywhere the merger would create an unfair advantage. Mediation in August will reveal more on the position of the DOJ, the response from UnitedHealth and Amedisys, and the specifics of the divestment of home health and hospice agencies. The merger proposal expires December 31, 2025. We will continue to follow the story as the parties enter mediation.

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Kristin Rowan, Editor
Kristin Rowan, Editor

Kristin Rowan has been working at The Rowan Report since 2008. She is the owner and Editor-in-chief of The Rowan Report, the industry’s most trusted source for care at home news, and speaker on Artificial Intelligence and Lone Worker Safety and state and national conferences.

She also runs Girard Marketing Group, a multi-faceted boutique marketing firm specializing in content creation, social media management, and event marketing.  Connect with Kristin directly kristin@girardmarketinggroup.com or www.girardmarketinggroup.com

©2025 by The Rowan Report, Peoria, AZ. All rights reserved. This article originally appeared in The Rowan Report. One copy may be printed for personal use: further reproduction by permission only. editor@therowanreport.com