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Centene As the health insurance company grapples with rising medical costs, funding cuts and declining membership, it announced Monday that it has offered buyouts to some of its employees.
“Centene is committed to delivering a simpler, better experience for our members and partners while responding to the realities of today’s healthcare environment, positioning us to lead the future of healthcare,” a company spokesperson said in a statement. “Today, we announced a voluntary severance program to support employees who are considering a career change.”
The company did not disclose the number of employees who received the acquisition offer or the target amount of employee reductions. The stock initially fell 4% after Bloomberg first reported the news on Monday.
If the company fails to meet its voluntary redundancy goals, layoffs could follow, Bloomberg reported.
Centene is the largest Medicaid provider and focuses on Medicare and other federal health plans through the Affordable Care Act. The acquisition comes after the company reported a 6% year-over-year decline in membership to 26.3 million members in the first quarter, according to a filing.
Centene’s ACA business lost approximately 2 million members in the first quarter compared to the end of 2025. The main reason is that Congress let enhanced federal aid in the program expire at the beginning of the year. At a Barclays conference in March, company executives also predicted that ACA membership would decline by nearly 40% by the end of 2026.
Centene is bracing for the impact of more than $900 billion in Medicaid cuts over 10 years, and the insurance industry as a whole is still managing higher-than-expected health care costs in private Medicare plans.
