Tag Archives: Health/Medical Insurance

Walgreens Unit Close to Roughly $9 Billion Deal With Summit Health

A unit of

Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc.

WBA 3.78%

is nearing a deal to combine with a big owner of medical practices and urgent-care centers in a transaction worth roughly $9 billion including debt, according to people familiar with the matter, the latest in a string of acquisitions by big consumer-focused companies aiming to delve deeper into medical care.

The drugstore giant’s primary-care-center subsidiary, Village Practice Management, would combine with Summit Health, the parent company of CityMD urgent-care centers, in an agreement that could be reached as early as Monday, the people said.

Health insurer

Cigna Corp.

CI 0.73%

is expected to invest in the combined company, the people said.

There is no guarantee the parties will reach a deal, the people cautioned, noting that they are still hammering out details of an agreement.

Summit Health, which is backed by private-equity firm Warburg Pincus LLC, has more than 370 locations in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Pennsylvania and Central Oregon, according to the company’s website. Current and former physicians also own a large interest in the business.

Village Practice Management, which does business as VillageMD, provides care for patients at free-standing practices as well as at Walgreens locations, virtually and in the home. In 2021, Walgreens announced it had made a $5.2 billion investment in VillageMD, boosting its stake to 63%. At the time, Walgreens said the investment would help accelerate the opening of at least 600 Village Medical at Walgreens primary-care practices across the country by 2025 and 1,000 by 2027.

The expected deal follows a string of mergers involving companies like VillageMD and CityMD as big healthcare providers seek more direct connections with patients.

Amazon.com Inc.

in July agreed to purchase primary-care operator

1Life Healthcare Inc.,

which operates under the name One Medical, for about $4 billion. In September,

CVS Health Corp.

struck a deal to acquire home-healthcare company Signify Healthcare Inc. for $8 billion.

Cano Health Inc.,

which operates primary-care centers, has attracted interest from both CVS and insurer

Humana Inc.

in recent months, The Wall Street Journal has reported.

Bloomberg a week ago reported VillageMD’s interest in Summit Health.

Walgreens appears to have pre-empted a sale process for Summit Health that was set to kick off next year, according to the people, who said the company was about to interview banks before it received interest from VillageMD.

Summit Health has been backed by Warburg Pincus since 2017, when it took a stake in CityMD, a large chain of New York City urgent-care centers.

Since that time, Warburg has helped the company complete multiple transformative acquisitions, including the 2019 merger of CityMD and multi-speciality medical-practice group, Summit Medical Group.

New York-based Warburg, which has more than $85 billion in assets under management, is no stranger to healthcare. The firm counts healthcare-IT business Modernizing Medicine Inc. and Ensemble Health Partners, a revenue-cycle management business for hospitals, among its portfolio companies.

Write to Laura Cooper at laura.cooper@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Appeared in the November 7, 2022, print edition as ‘Walgreens Nears Deal For Urgent Care Firm.’

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Humana, CVS Circle Cano Health as Potential Buyers

Humana Inc.

HUM 0.67%

and

CVS Health Corp.

CVS 0.06%

are circling

Cano Health Inc.,

CANO 32.17%

according to people familiar with the situation, as healthcare heavyweights scramble to snap up primary-care providers.

The talks are serious and a deal to purchase Cano could be struck in the next several weeks, assuming the negotiations don’t fall apart, some of the people said. Cano shares, which had been down nearly 7%, turned positive and closed up 32% after The Wall Street Journal reported on the talks with Humana and other unnamed parties, giving the company a market value of roughly $4 billion.

Bloomberg subsequently reported CVS’s interest.

It couldn’t be learned which other potential buyers might be in the mix, but Cano could be Humana’s to lose as the health insurer has a right of first refusal on any sale, part of an agreement that was originally struck in 2019.

Miami-based Cano operates primary-care centers in California, Florida, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, Illinois, New York, New Jersey and Puerto Rico, according to documentation from the company. It mainly serves Medicare Advantage members, a private-sector alternative to Medicare for seniors.

Ties between the companies run deep: Cano was Humana’s biggest independent primary-care provider in Florida, serving over 68,000 of its Medicare Advantage members at the end of last year, according to a securities filing. Cano also operated 11 medical centers in Texas and Nevada for which Humana is the exclusive health plan for Medicare Advantage, the filing added.

Humana has already established a footprint in primary care, which it continues to expand. Earlier this year, its CenterWell Senior Primary Care business joined with private-equity firm Welsh, Carson, Anderson & Stowe to open about 100 new senior-focused primary-care clinics between 2023 and 2025, building on an earlier, similar partnership.

At its investor day last week, Humana’s chief executive,

Bruce Broussard,

said that the company sees a total addressable market of over $700 billion in “value-based” primary care for seniors. He noted that Humana has accelerated its investment in the sector over the past five years, becoming the nation’s largest senior-focused primary-care provider.

There has been a frenzy of deal making involving large companies scooping up primary-care assets as a means of getting closer to patients and providing them more personal service.

Amazon.com Inc.

agreed to purchase the parent of primary-care clinic operator One Medical for about $3.9 billion in July, while CVS Health Corp. agreed to buy

Signify Health Inc.

for $8 billion earlier this month.

Cano went public in 2020 through a special-purpose acquisition vehicle backed by real-estate investor

Barry Sternlicht,

who sits on its board. The deal valued the company at $4.4 billion.

Cano has been the target of two shareholder activists this year, both of which independently pushed for its sale.

Dan Loeb’s

Third Point LLC currently has a roughly 5% stake in the healthcare company. In March, he pointed to the market’s unfavorable view of companies that went public through SPACs as a reason to explore strategic alternatives.

Then in late August, Owl Creek Asset Management LP sent a letter to Cano’s board stating that it had amassed a roughly 4% stake and urged the company to hire investment bankers to explore a sale to a strategic buyer.

Cano has been backed by health-care-focused private-equity firm InTandem Capital Partners since 2016. The firm mainly makes investments in small-to-midsize companies.

Write to Laura Cooper at laura.cooper@wsj.com and Dana Cimilluca at dana.cimilluca@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Appeared in the September 23, 2022, print edition as ‘Humana, CVS Target Cano Health.’

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Judge Rejects Antitrust Challenge to UnitedHealth Acquisition

U.S. District Judge Carl Nichols ruled for the companies in an opinion that he kept under seal for now because he said it “may contain competitively sensitive information.” The judge said he would release a redacted public version of the ruling in the coming days. In a one-page public order, he denied the Justice Department’s request to block the companies from completing the deal.

The court ruling represents an early blow to stepped-up antitrust enforcement by the Biden administration, which sued in February to block the deal. The Justice Department’s top antitrust official,

Jonathan Kanter,

said the department disagreed with the decision and was considering its next steps.

“Protecting competition and access to affordable healthcare is of the utmost importance to the antitrust division and the Department of Justice,” Mr. Kanter said.

The decision is a triumph for UnitedHealth, which owns the largest U.S. health insurer and a healthcare operation that comprises thousands of doctors as well as clinics, surgery centers and other assets, along with a powerful conglomeration of health data.

In a statement, a UnitedHealth spokesman said, “We are pleased with the decision and look forward to combining with Change Healthcare as quickly as possible so that together we can continue our work to make the health system work better for everyone.”

Change provides services related to payment processes for healthcare systems, analytics for financing and billing and tools that help hospitals make decisions about patient care.

UnitedHealth had agreed to divest business assets related to claims-processing to address competition concerns, an offer the Justice Department had dismissed as insufficient.

Judge Nichols in his order required UnitedHealth to make that divestiture.

UnitedHealth’s deal for Change, announced in January 2021, will bring the health-technology company under the company’s Optum health-services arm. UnitedHealth had argued that its combination with Change could help improve care by getting better information to doctors, and reduce waste. It agreed to pay nearly $8 billion for Change and assume about $5 billion in debt.

The Justice Department had argued that the deal would give UnitedHealth a virtual monopoly on an important tool that health insurers use to determine when a claim should be paid. And it said the company shouldn’t be allowed to own Change Healthcare’s data clearinghouse, which rival insurers use to compete with UnitedHealth.

The judge, an appointee of former President

Donald Trump,

signaled his skepticism of the lawsuit in a hearing earlier this month. A trial took place in August.

The lawsuit was part of an early batch of antitrust cases brought by the Justice Department under President Biden, a Democrat, that were designed to take a harder line on corporate deal activity. Among other cases, the department is waiting on a ruling in its challenge to a major publishing industry deal, Penguin Random House’s planned acquisition of Simon & Schuster. And it is preparing to go to trial next week in its lawsuit challenging a partnership between

American Airlines Group Inc.

and

JetBlue Airways Corp.

The current crop of antitrust officials, backed by calls from Democrats for a more aggressive approach, have sought to set new court precedents that would steer the law in a broader direction, after years of rulings in which the judiciary has tended to read the antitrust laws more narrowly than a generation ago. Monday’s decision served as a reminder that the Justice Department’s goals are dependent on proving their cases in front of a judge.

The Federal Trade Commission, which shares antitrust authority with the department, also is facing hurdles. It recently lost a ruling from its own in-house administrative law judge, in a case where it was challenging

Illumina Inc.’s

acquisition of cancer-testing developer Grail Inc.

Monday’s decision comes as UnitedHealth and its rivals have continued to move more deeply into vertical integration of health assets, spanning insurance and healthcare provider businesses, as well as pulling together ever-larger troves of health data.

Even after the Justice Department filed suit to block the Change deal, UnitedHealth moved ahead with other acquisitions, including a $5.4 billion takeover of home-health company

LHC Group Inc.

announced last March.

Earlier this month,

CVS Health Corp.

—the parent of health insurer Aetna, a pharmacy-benefit operation and its eponymous drugstores—announced an $8 billion deal to take over home-healthcare company Signify Health Inc. CVS has said it wants to get deeper into the business of primary care.

Write to Anna Wilde Mathews at anna.mathews@wsj.com and Brent Kendall at brent.kendall@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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CVS Is in Advanced Talks to Buy Signify Health for Around $8 Billion

CVS Health Corp.

CVS -0.49%

is in advanced talks to acquire the home-healthcare company

Signify Health Inc.

SGFY 1.34%

for around $8 billion, according to people familiar with the matter.

CVS appears to have beat out other heavy hitters including

Amazon.com Inc.

and

UnitedHealth Group Inc.,

which had been circling Signify for a deal that could be announced soon. UnitedHealth never submitted an official bid, one of the people said.

There is still no guarantee that CVS will reach a deal for Signify, which has been exploring strategic alternatives since earlier this summer.

Bids for the company were due Sept. 6, but people familiar with the matter have said that an eager buyer could make a move before then.

Signify’s valuation has ballooned since The Wall Street Journal reported in August that it was for sale. Shares of the company closed at $28.77 on Friday, giving it a market capitalization of roughly $6.7 billion.

Signify works with a large group of doctors to facilitate house calls. It uses analytics and technology to help physician groups, health plans, employers and health systems with in-home care. It offers health evaluations for Medicare Advantage and other plans.

At the close of its deal this year to buy Caravan Health, Signify said that it supported roughly $10 billion in total medical spending.

The company went public in February 2021, raising more than $500 million as a result of the offering. On the day of its initial public offering, shares of the company priced above its expected range, at $24.

New York-based New Mountain Capital has backed Signify since 2017. The firm—which had more than $37 billion in assets under management as of early August—has steadily expanded Signify through a series of mergers and acquisitions since its initial investment.

New Mountain is well-versed in the healthcare sector. It previously sold the healthcare payments firm Equian LLC to UnitedHealth for roughly $3.2 billion in 2019.

For CVS, the deal builds on an effort years in the making to transform itself into a major provider of healthcare services through acquisitions and expanded medical services. The company had been struggling to counter slowing revenue from prescription drugs, which drive the bulk of its sales, and to ward off competition from

Amazon

AMZN -0.24%

for retail dollars.

CVS, the nation’s largest drugstore chain by stores and revenue, acquired Aetna in 2018, arguing that melding the insurance company’s patient data with its network of nearly 10,000 bricks-and-mortar sites would squeeze out costs while improving care and convenience.

The strategy has paid off, buoyed by a surge in demand for Covid-19 vaccines and tests at the height of the pandemic. CVS’s market capitalization has grown to more than $130 billion from around $75 billion since the Aetna deal.

The line between Amazon and Walmart is becoming increasingly blurred, as the two companies seek to maintain their slice of the estimated $5 trillion retail market while chipping away at each other’s share, often by borrowing ideas. Photos: Amazon/Walmart

The company is outperforming

Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc.,

which opted against major acquisitions, in the years since. Walgreens, also racing to expand into healthcare, focused largely on partnerships rather than deals. But last year it bought a controlling stake in the primary-care network Village MD, giving it doctors’ offices that CVS had said it could do without.

CVS Chief Executive

Karen Lynch

has since said that the company must have a foothold in primary care if it is to become a full-service medical provider.

CVS had previously been interested in a deal for the parent of One Medical, people familiar with the matter have said.

Amazon

AMZN -0.24%

agreed to purchase the primary-care clinic operator for about $3.9 billion in July.

The Federal Trade Commission is currently investigating the deal. The parent company of One Medical,

1Life Healthcare Inc.,

disclosed the investigation in a securities filing. The disclosure said One Medical and Amazon each received a request for additional information about the deal from the FTC.

While Wall Street has largely focused on CVS’s efforts to acquire primary-care practices, executives have also discussed ambitions to expand its in-home health presence.

A deal for Signify would represent a bright spot in an otherwise lackluster run for deals lately. Deal volumes globally are down roughly 30% this year after a flurry of activity last year, because of a drop in companies’ valuations, market volatility and other factors including Russia’s war in Ukraine.

Healthcare deal making in particular has slowed more than many other sectors. Over $200 billion of healthcare deals announced so far this year has compared with over $400 billion at this time last year, according to Dealogic. The largest healthcare deal to date this year in the U.S. is

Pfizer Inc.’s

$11.6 billion agreement in May to purchase the rest of

Biohaven Pharmaceutical Holding Co.

Write to Laura Cooper at laura.cooper@wsj.com, Sharon Terlep at sharon.terlep@wsj.com and Cara Lombardo at cara.lombardo@wsj.com

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Alleged Covid-19 Fraud Schemes Totaling $150 Million Draw Criminal Charges

Federal prosecutors have charged about 20 people in the past two weeks with allegedly engaging in various fraud schemes related to the Covid-19 pandemic that amounted to about $150 million in improper government claims, around $20 million of which have been paid, officials said.

The Justice Department has stepped up efforts to uncover theft from programs that were pumping billions of dollars into the healthcare system after the outbreak of the pandemic in 2020. The new cases are filed in districts around the country, and provide a sweeping look at how some healthcare providers allegedly sought to cheat Medicare and other programs by bundling charges for unnecessary services—or those that weren’t ever provided—with the delivery of relatively inexpensive Covid-19 tests.

A doctor who ran drive-through Covid-19 testing sites in Maryland, for example, allegedly billed Medicare for many of those tests, along with $1.5 million in other lengthy physician visits that purportedly accompanied them, but never actually happened. The doctor,

Ron Elfenbein,

allegedly told his employees to submit the tests for reimbursement as services that required 30-minute consultations, because the higher complexity services were “the ‘bread and butter’ of how we got paid,” an indictment returned on Tuesday alleged. A woman who answered the phone at Dr. Elfenbein’s company said he wasn’t in the office on Wednesday and a lawyer for him couldn’t be identified.

Attorney General Merrick Garland, glasses, and Kevin Chambers, who was tapped last month to lead the Justice Department’s Covid-19 fraud enforcement efforts.



Photo:

Kevin Lamarque/Associated Press

A nurse practitioner in Miami, Elizabeth Hernandez, allegedly billed Medicare for $134 million in fraudulent claims, using relaxed telemedicine rules to sign orders for unnecessary genetic tests and medical equipment. And people in New Jersey, California and Colorado allegedly sold hundreds of fake vaccine cards created to look like official Centers for Disease Control and Prevention records.

A lawyer for Ms. Hernandez said that she “vehemently denies the charges and didn’t knowingly participate in any scheme to defraud the Medicare program.” The other defendants or their lawyers couldn’t immediately be reached for comment or didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.

The cases “involve extraordinary efforts to prosecute some of the largest and most wide-ranging pandemic frauds detected to date,” said

Kevin Chambers,

who was tapped last month to lead the Justice Department’s Covid-19 fraud enforcement efforts.

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In the wake of the pandemic, prosecutors and regulators pored over Medicare billing data, spotting anomalies and pursuing a range of investigations. Last year, prosecutors charged another dozen healthcare providers with fraud schemes related to the pandemic totaling $143 million in allegedly false bills to government programs.

In some of the new cases, providers allegedly used Covid-19 testing to obtain personal information and saliva or blood samples from patients, and used them to submit for more expensive tests. In one California case, two owners of a clinical lab—

Imran Shams

and

Lourdes Navarro

—were charged with a healthcare fraud, kickback and money-laundering scheme that involved more than $100 million in fraudulent claims for Covid-19 and respiratory pathogen tests. They also sought to conceal their role by laundering the proceeds through shell companies Ms. Navarro controlled, prosecutors said.

Officials said the pair and other defendants preyed upon patients’ fear during the pandemic to tack on other unnecessary tests that had a more lucrative reimbursement rate but weren’t medically necessary. A lawyer for Ms. Navarro said she would plead not guilty to the charges. “She always tried to follow the law and provide appropriate and quality testing services to the laboratory’s patients. She looks forward to clearing her name in court,” said the lawyer,

Mark Werksman.

A lawyer for Mr. Shams couldn’t immediately be identified.

Prosecutors allege fake Covid-19 vaccine cards were found in a Colorado man’s trash.



Photo:

U.S. Department of Justice

“What is perhaps most disturbing about healthcare fraud is that patients may be harmed in furtherance of fraud schemes advanced by medical professionals who sadly place profit above patients’ health,”

Aaron Tapp,

section chief of the FBI’s financial crimes section said Wednesday.

In other cases, defendants allegedly worked to get around new requirements installed after the Covid-19 outbreak, including a required proof of vaccination at some businesses.

In September, Colorado businessman

Robert Van Camp

told a potential customer—who turned out to be an undercover agent—he had fake Covid-19 vaccine cards. “How are you guys doing that whole vaccine bullshit?” he asked, according to a complaint and arrest warrant filed on Monday, adding that he had sold fake cards to three Olympic athletes and hundreds of others. “Until I get caught and go to jail, f— it, I’m taking the money,” he said, “I’ve saved a thousand lives. I mean we’re talking about people who can’t go to work, can’t go to school, and they’re losing their job. It’s insane they can’t travel because of this bullshit.” He sold the agent five cards for $600.

In October, agents searched Mr. Van Camp’s trash at his home that he shared with an alleged co-conspirator who worked for a defense contractor and had a security clearance, finding handwritten documents titled “Card List” and “Card Order$” with the names of people and amounts, and several torn up vaccine cards, prosecutors alleged. Mr. Van Camp was arrested on Tuesday, according to court records. A lawyer for Mr. Van Camp didn’t immediately respond to a message seeking comment.

Since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020, the scientific understanding of its transmission and prevention has evolved. WSJ’s Daniela Hernandez explains what strategies have worked for stemming the spread of the virus and which are outdated in 2022. Illustration: Adele Morgan

Write to Aruna Viswanatha at Aruna.Viswanatha@wsj.com and Sadie Gurman at sadie.gurman@wsj.com

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Study Finds Two Pfizer Vaccine Doses Offer Less Protection Against Omicron Than Against Delta

The first large real-world study of how vaccines hold up against Omicron found that two shots of

Pfizer Inc.

and

BioNTech SE’s

Covid-19 vaccine lowered the risk of hospital admission by 70% for patients infected with the highly mutated variant.

The study, by South Africa’s largest private health insurer Discovery Ltd., found that while Omicron reduced vaccine effectiveness against infection to 33% from 80% for Delta, its effect on protection against hospitalization was less marked, falling to 70% from 93%.

While the study provides important clues about how vaccines hold up against Omicron, it is difficult to draw wide-ranging conclusions from South Africa, which has a much younger population than Europe and the U.S. and also has a different mix of immunity, with high levels of prior infection but a relatively low vaccination rate. For conclusions that may be more relevant for the U.S., health authorities will look closely at the U.K., whose demographic profile and vaccination rates are more like the U.S. and where the variant is already well established.

It comes as many governments rush to roll out booster shots more widely in the hope that—as early studies have suggested—a further shot will shore up protection against Omicron.

A growing number of studies indicate Omicron is more resistant to current vaccines than previous Covid variants, though boosters seem to help. WSJ’s Daniela Hernandez gets an exclusive look inside a lab testing how antibodies interact with Omicron. Photo illustration: Tom Grillo

“It’s very heartening to see this result and that we still have vaccine effectiveness [against hospital admission] that is still greater than 50%,” said Glenda Gray, president and chief executive officer of the South African Medical Research Council, which collaborated with Discovery.

The study examined 211,610 Covid-19 test results in adults reported since the beginning of September. It used that data to compare vaccine effectiveness during September and October, when Delta was dominant, with the three-week period between Nov. 15 and Dec. 7, when Omicron took hold. Discovery Health insures around 3.7 million people in South Africa.

The study—the largest to provide clues about how the vaccines hold up against Omicron in the real world—suggests that although the new strain can easily infect people who have been fully vaccinated, it is still much less likely to cause serious illness when it does. The research hasn’t yet been published or peer-reviewed in a scientific journal and scientists not involved in the research said the conclusions could change as more data emerges.

The Omicron variant was first identified by scientists in South Africa around three weeks ago and has driven a sharp rise in cases there. It has now been detected in 77 countries across the world, according to the World Health Organization. On Friday, scientists estimated Omicron’s R number in South Africa—a measure of how many people the average infected person goes on to infect—stood at 2.5, higher than any earlier variant.

New daily cases averaged 20,488 for the week ending Dec. 13, nearly double the week before. On Monday, in an indication that a large number of infections are being missed, health authorities said 31% of tests had registered a positive result.

The findings build on earlier, laboratory-based research from various groups around the world examining how well the blood of vaccinated people neutralizes the Omicron variant. Those studies found that antibodies in the blood of people who had received two doses of vaccine were much weaker against Omicron than earlier strains.

Last week, Pfizer executives predicted that the vaccines would hold up better against severe disease because the immune cells that fight the virus once it takes hold could still recognize most parts of Omicron’s spike protein, which the virus uses to enter cells.

Neutralizing antibodies act as the body’s first line of defense, aiming to prevent infection by stopping the virus from entering cells. Other parts of the immune system, such as T-cells, come into play to prevent serious illness once infection takes hold.

The Discovery study also found that protection against infection from Omicron appeared to wane over time in vaccinated people. People who had received their second dose in the two to four weeks before the Omicron period were 56% protected against infection with the new strain. That protection fell to 25% for people who had received their second dose three to four months earlier. In the study, infection referred to a positive PCR test result, so is likely to reflect symptomatic disease, the researchers said.

Protection against severe disease appeared to decline with age, but the researchers cautioned that the data was uncertain and could be complicated by a larger waning effect in older groups, who would have received their shots earlier. The researchers also found that Omicron eroded the protective effect of prior infection.

The study couldn’t examine the real-world effect of a third shot because South Africa only recently approved boosters, and hasn’t yet started rolling them out. But the researchers said it was likely that a booster would strengthen protection against infection. Pfizer and BioNTech last week said a third dose restored antibodies to a level where they could block the Omicron variant in lab tests.

“The vaccines were designed to protect against hospitalization and death,” said Shirley Collie, chief health analytics actuary at Discovery Health. “These breakthrough infections we do expect to see. This is something a boosting strategy would mitigate.”

Separately, the study found that, adjusting for various factors, including age, adults infected with the Omicron variant were 29% less likely to need hospitalization than during the country’s first wave, which was dominated by a strain known as D614G. It also found that, among those who were admitted to hospital, the disease appeared to be less serious, with 5% of hospitalized patients needing intensive care, versus 22% during the Delta wave.

The researchers said they couldn’t determine whether Omicron is inherently less virulent than earlier strains, or whether the lower rate of hospitalization resulted from a high level of immunity in the population from either prior infection or vaccination.

Officials from the World Health Organization on Tuesday also cautioned against premature conclusions that Omicron causes milder disease. And even if it does prove to be a milder variant, the sheer number of cases could lead to a surge in hospitalizations and overwhelm health systems.

“A more transmissible virus can do just as much damage or even more than one that is more severe but less transmissible,” said Bruce Aylward, a senior adviser to WHO Director General

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.

“We need to see this over time.”

The South African study also found that children have a 20% higher risk of being admitted to hospital with the virus compared with the first wave, but researchers said the figure may just reflect a higher infection rate among children being admitted for non-Covid care, because hospitals routinely test all admissions.

Write to Denise Roland at Denise.Roland@wsj.com

Corrections & Amplifications
The Discovery study examined 211,610 Covid-19 test results in adults reported since the beginning of September. An earlier version of this article incorrectly said the study examined 211,610 positive Covid-19 test results. (Corrected on Dec. 14)

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Sizzling Stock Market Sets High Bar for Earnings Season

The stock market is running hot entering first-quarter earnings season.

A formidable rally has propelled the S&P 500 up 9.9% this year to 20 record closes, keeping stock valuations at historic highs. Some investors, though, say shares may have more room to run as the rollout of Covid-19 vaccines and bountiful government spending strengthen the outlook for corporate profits.

Earnings season kicks off in earnest this week, with results from America’s big banks—including JPMorgan Chase & Co., Bank of America Corp. and Wells Fargo & Co—and companies ranging from Delta Air Lines Inc. to PepsiCo Inc. and UnitedHealth Group Inc.

Investors will be watching for signs of confidence from executives that customer demand will keep rising and cost increases can be managed to help ease their concerns that stocks are looking expensive.

The S&P 500 traded Thursday at 22.6 times its projected earnings over the next 12 months, above the five-year average of 18.14, according to FactSet. Paying up, even for shares of high-quality companies, raises the prospect of muted future returns for shareholders.

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