Oh, there absolutely is. Want proof? Here you go:
Potter, who spent 15 years at CIGNA, said health plans have a financial incentive to cancel the policies of their most costly members and have implemented strategies to do so. “They look carefully to see if a sick policyholder may have omitted a minor illness, a pre-existing condition, when applying for coverage, and then they use that as justification to cancel the policy,” he testified. And canceling policies for even a small number of such members can have “a big effect” on the bottom line, he added. “Where is the logic and the humanity of having pre-existing conditions not covered in our society?” Potter asked. He noted that his testimony wasn’t aimed at CIGNA specifically, but rather at an industry that he said is “taking this country in the wrong direction.”
http://www.aishealth.com/Bnow/hbd070909.html
""They confuse their customers and dump the sick — all so they can satisfy their Wall Street investors," said Wendell Potter, who retired as CIGNA's vice president of corporate communications last year. He spent nearly 15 years at the company and four years at Humana."
"Potter, for instance, recalled a trip on a corporate jet from Philadelphia, where CIGNA is headquartered, to Connecticut, where the company's health insurance business is based in Bloomfield. During the flight, he was served lunch on gold-rimmed china with a gold-plated knife and fork.
"I realized for the first time that someone's insurance premiums were paying for me to travel in such luxury," he said on his blog."
"He condemned insurers' efforts to get rid of unprofitable customers, sell policies that can mislead consumers and offer very limited coverage, and pay out as small a portion of premiums as possible for claims in order to boost profits and please Wall Street."
"Potter described in written testimony how insurers use "purging" — unrealistic rate increases — to drive off less profitable employers. Citing a USA Today report, he recalled how CIGNA boosted rates in 2006 for the Entertainment Industry Group Insurance Trust so much that for some family plans, premiums would have topped $44,000 a year."
http://www.courant.com/business/hc-cigna-potter.artjun25,0,4107201.story
Oh, and profit is cool.. just not at the expense of american lives for american profits, which this clearly is.
Keep trying to dodge that fact though.