UnitedHealth Group has scrubbed much of its website mentioning its diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) policies, including pulling down blog posts and removing large sections from its website, TechCrunch has learned.
According to archived copies of UnitedHealthโs website, several of the companyโs web pages dedicated to DEI no longer load and now redirect to a โpage not foundโ error. A section of the companyโs career page that used to have a dedicated section for diversity, equity, and inclusion, along with its diversity initiatives, no longer appears on the same live page.ย UnitedHealth also removed a 2022 blog post featuring a conversation with its vice president of DEI.ย
Itโs not clear why UnitedHealth pulled down the pages, and if it represents a shift of verbiage or an actual change in its policies. UnitedHealth spokesperson Tyler Mason did not return requests for comment Wednesday.
The removal of DEI from UnitedHealthโs websites coincides with a broad retreat from DEI policies and programs by household names and tech companies alike, amid mounting pressure from Trump administration-issued executive orders targeting DEI programs.
In February, U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi instructed the Justice Department to โinvestigate, eliminate, and penalizeโ DEI programs that it considers illegal at private sector companies that receive federal funding. A federal appeals court temporarily allowed the Trump administration to press ahead, despite a lower court ruling the governmentโs efforts unlawful.
Several tech companies have already scrubbed mentions of DEI from their websites, including Google and OpenAI.
TechCrunch saw UnitedHealth take down its web pages mentioning DEI throughout Wednesday morning in real time. Since the ransomware attack on Change Healthcare last year, TechCrunch has used a web page monitor to automatically and continually check for any changes to its website, such as updates to its data breach notice.
In removing โDiversity, Equity and Inclusionโ in UnitedHealthโs website menu, the company added a slimmed-down page with weaker language it calls the โCulture of Belonging,โ which leaves out previous references to the companyโs diversity efforts on university campuses, diversity in recruiting, and the companyโs various employee resource groups.





