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Kaiser Posts Turnaround for 1999

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From Bloomberg News

Kaiser Permanente, the No. 1 not-for-profit health maintenance organization, on Monday reported a profit for 1999 as it sold money-losing plans, raised premiums and turned around its biggest unit in California.

Kaiser reported 1999 profit of $311 million, compared with a loss of $288 million in 1998, from its continuing health-care operations, excluding one-time gains and expenses. The company said its revenue rose to $16.8 billion for 1999 from $15.5 billion the previous year.

Oakland-based Kaiser has been trying to cut costs and jettison money-losing divisions as it boosts the rates it charges employers, following losses in 1997 and 1998. The company said its turnaround efforts are on track.

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“We’re in the early stages of a three-year turnaround program,” said Dale Crandall, Kaiser’s chief financial officer.

The yearly profit didn’t include losses from unprofitable units in the Northeast and North Carolina that Kaiser has sold.

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