
Contract talks stall between Northern Light Health and Anthem
By Christopher Burns, Bangor Daily News Staff
Contract talks have stalled between Northern Light Health and Anthem.
That comes three years after another high-profile fight between Anthem, Maine’s largest health insurer, and MaineHealth, the state’s largest health system, which includes hospitals in Portland and Belfast.
On June 4, Northern Light Health said its contract with Anthem will expire on Sept. 30, 2025, if the insurer doesn’t agree to raise reimbursement rates.
That would mean Northern Light’s hospitals from Presque Isle to Bangor to Ellsworth would move out of network for Mainers with Anthem insurance.
James Rohrbaugh, executive vice president and chief financial officer for Northern Light Health, said that Anthem’s reimbursement rates have increased at a rate of less than 1.5 percent despite the annual inflation rate for health services averaging 7.5 percent. Reimbursement for services is necessary to keep hospitals, practices and services open and staffed, Northern Light said.
“Anthem’s unwillingness to keep pace with the costs of providing care directly contribute to the risks facing rural healthcare,” James Rohrbaugh said in a statement.
Additionally, Northern Light Health pointed to Anthem’s increase in payment denials for patient care and its 10 percent increase in its profit margin in Maine.
Northern Light Health pledged to work with patients and group policyholders to help them understand their options for care if no contract agreement is reached.
In 2022, a contract dispute between MaineHealth and Anthem played out in public, with the health system accusing the insurer of owing millions in back payments and holding up and disputing millions more in payments, while Anthem accused MaineHealth of millions in overcharges.
Before the contract expired, both sides reached a deal, preventing MaineHealth from withdrawing from Anthem’s network.