Kaiser Permanente, Renown Health Unveil Insurance, Outpatient Joint Venture

Integrated nonprofit health systems Kaiser Permanente and Renown Health have announced a joint venture giving the former an entry into northern Nevada.

The deal, announced Wednesday, is still pending regulatory approval but is expected to close in early 2026. With it, the partners would own and operate a health plan and new outpatient care network under the banner of Kaiser Permanente Nevada.

“Our members, employers, physicians and community members have been asking us to provide our unique offering of value-based care in Nevada for some time,” Greg A. Adams, chair and CEO of Kaiser Permanente, said in a release. “Working with the leading health care provider in northern Nevada, we will now have the opportunity to care for more people, help more employers offer coverage to their employees, and in collaboration with Renown Health, improve the health of this growing community.”

The arrangement will build off Renown’s Hometown Health—a long-running nonprofit insurance plan—and one of its existing primary care locations in Reno, Nevada, according to the announcement.

Kaiser will acquire a majority interest in the plan and begin enrolling northern Nevada employers and residents during 2026’s open enrollment. Meanwhile, the partners will open a new ambulatory health system with sites in central and northern Reno. Along with the existing Renown clinic, these sites will provide multispecialty care and other diagnostic, pharmacy and ancillary services to the plan’s members and other patients.

“By joining our health plan together with Kaiser Permanente, a respected national partner, we can expand access to affordable, high-quality insurance coverage for even more Nevadans,” Brian Erling, M.D., president and CEO of Renown Health, said in the announcement. “This collaboration strengthens our ability to keep care local, while bringing the scale, expertise and innovation of a national leader.”

Reno-based Renown Health’s integrated care network includes two acute care hospitals, a children’s hospital, a trauma center, a medical group and other care facilities extending into California. It employs more than 8,000 people, brought in about $2 billion of total revenues in fiscal 2024 and, since 2021, has partnered with the University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine for clinical training and research.

There will be no immediate changes to Hometown Health or Senior Care Plus plans run by Renown, nor to their networks and points of contact. Renown will also continue to operate as an independent system and accept all of its current health insurance plans.

Oakland, California-based Kaiser Permanente is the country’s largest nonprofit health system by total operating revenue, clearing nearly $116 billion across 2024. It runs 40 hospitals, over 600 medical offices and counts 12.6 million members across eight states and the District of Columbia. Outside of its core care network, the organization also been working to expand its value-based care model through midsize health system acquisitions via its Risant Health subsidiary.

In commentary on its second-quarter financial performance, Adams said Kaiser intends to face financial and demographic headwinds by being “focused on enhancing quality, service and access, and redesigning our cost structure as we lead the shift toward value-based care that prioritizes affordability and improved patient outcomes.”

 

Source Link

Recommended Articles

IRS Unveils New Health Savings Account Limits For 2027

The IRS has released the 2027 contribution limits for health savings accounts, or HSAs, which offer triple-tax benefits for investors. Starting in 2027, the new HSA contribution limit will be $4,500 for self-only plans, up from $4,400 in 2026, based on the latest inflation adjustments. The HSA limit for family coverage will also rise in 2027. That cap will jump to $9,000, ...

Read More

Trump Backs HHS Overhaul Of Childhood Vaccine Schedule With New Order

President Trump is signing off on a decision from the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) earlier this year to cut down on the number of required vaccinations for children. The president endorsed these adjusted immunization requirements in an executive order on Friday. Trump cited his administration’s commitment to “protecting religious liberty and parental authority” in the order. “Therefore, ...

Read More

China’s Rise in Drug Development Looms Over U.S.

For decades, an annual gathering of oncologists has featured drug trials that were run mainly at American and European hospitals.   But at this year’s meeting, which was held in Chicago over the weekend, the signs are everywhere of China’s ascendance as a powerhouse in drug development — and of the threat that many believe ...

Read More

UnitedHealthcare To Cut Pediatric Prior Authorization Requirements By Two-Thirds

UnitedHealth’s main health insurance business says it will reduce the number of prior authorization requirements for patients under 18 by about two-thirds by Dec. 31. UnitedHealthcare will cut prior authorization requirements for commercial health plans, as well as for Medicaid plans, and the shift will affect reviews for many diagnostic services and routine surgical procedures, ...

Read More
arrowcaret-downclosefacebook-squarehamburgerinstagram-squarelinkedin-squarepauseplaytwitter-squareyoutube-square