Thursday, June 28, 2012

2012 Employer Health Care Trends


Over the past decade, how individuals receive and pay for their healthcare is changing. As the Supreme Court prepares to decide on the constitutionality of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA), employers recognize the ruling will have a significant impact on health care in the years to come. Confused by the pending legislation, employers are also fearful of rising insurance costs and are hesitant to make any significant changes to their current plans. However, despite this uncertainty, there are a few strategies employers can employ to manage the changing tide.

2012 Health Care Trends

According to the 2011 annual survey of medical cost trends by PriceWaterhouseCoopers (PwC), on average US employers can expect health care cost to rise 8.5 percent in 2012. This is 1.5 percent below the Aon Hewitt 2011 Health Care Trend survey which estimated national medical care costs will increase by 10 percent. These figures are lower than 2010 and 2011figures which were between 12 percent – 14 percent. Much of the slowdown is due to the recession and thus not unexpected health experts say. But some of it seems to be attributable to changing behavior by consumers and providers of health care — meaning the lower rates of growth might persist even as the economy picks up.

Since Medicare and Medicaid are two of the largest contributors to the country’s long-term debts, slower growth in health costs could reduce the pressure for enormous spending cuts or tax increases. In 2009 and 2010, total nationwide health care spending grew less than 4 percent per year.  This was the slowest annual pace in more than five decades, according to the latest numbers from the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services. After years of taking up a growing share of economic activity, health spending held steady in 2010, at 17.9 percent of the gross domestic product.

The growth rate has also slowed as millions of Americans lost insurance coverage along with their jobs. Worried about job security, employees may have feared taking time off work for doctor’s visits or surgical procedures, or skipped non-urgent care when money was tight. Still, the slowdown was sharper than health economists expected.  A broad bipartisan range of academics, hospital administrators and policy experts have started to wonder— if doctors and patients have begun to change their behavior in ways that bend the so-called cost curve.  If so, it was happening just as the new health care law was coming into force and before the Supreme Court could weigh in on it or the voters could pronounce their own verdict at the polls.

While health cost growth may have slowed, the premiums for insurance still need to catch up.  Confirming this, actuarial firm Milliman released its 2011 Milliman Medical index in May 2011. The report shows health care cost for a typical U.S. family of four covered by a preferred provider organization (PPO) in 2011 was $19,393. This reflects an increase of 7.3 percent over 2010. Even though the percentage of increase was the lowest in recent years, the increase in total dollars—$1,319 in 2011—was the highest in the history of the study. Of this $1,319, employers covered about 40% of the increase ($641) while employees shouldered the rest—$403 in payroll contributions and $275 in additional cost sharing.

Employers React to Rising Costs & Health Care Reform

Here are four strategies that have been growing in popularity over the past several years.  These strategies have been successful in containing insurance premiums and overall costs:

1.    Consumer Directed Health Plans
2.    Accountable Care Organizations
3.    Micro Market Networks
4.    Employee Wellness Programs


Consumer Directed Health Plans

Employers continue to explore consumer‐directed health care plans (CDHC). These plans are structured to give employees greater control over their personal health care costs, thereby promoting caution before they utilize expensive procedures or request unnecessary treatments.

CDHC plans offer higher deductible plan options, coupled with a Health Savings Account (HSA) or Health Reimbursement Account (HRA).  Employees will pay for out‐of-pocket medical costs with their self‐funded plans.

Accountable Care Organizations

An Accountable Care Organization (ACO) is a network of health care organizations, hospitals and doctors that unite in order to provide coordinated medical care to patients. Until recently, health care in America has mostly been fragmented. Hospitals, pharmacies, skilled nurses, primary care and specialty doctors operated as separate entities across the health spectrum. ACOs were created as a result of the Health Care Reform and are meant to integrate, coordinate and be held accountable for an individual’s health car.  This will generate better medical outcomes at a lower cost. Studies performed on current ACOs including Mayo Clinic, Cleveland Clinic and Intermountain indicate by delivering efficient health care this will help reduce health care costs by as much as 50%. By driving out inefficiencies, reducing unnecessary hospital admissions and applying the best approaches to clinical care, ACOs provide a promising picture of affordable health care.

In Massachusetts, the Massachusetts Health Care Cost Trends - Premiums and Expenditures study released in May 2012 also concluded health care costs growth has slowed in Massachusetts and is consistent with the national slowing trend due primarily to ACOs.

Micro Market Networks

Micro Market Networks operate in a similar vein to ACOs, without being quite as integrated. Many insurance companies, including Blue Cross, Harvard, Tufts and Fallon, are working on the initial phases of Micro Market Networks.  These carriers are offering a variety of options including the purchase of an independent plan that only includes access to a particular group of self-contained health providers. The expectation over the coming two years is many regional networks of this sort will develop. The hope is these Micro Market Networks will operate in a similar fashion to ACOs.  These networks will improve efficiencies and drive costs down.  Currently in MA, these Micro networks are seeing from a 3 percent to 12 percent reduction in premiums.

Employee Wellness Programs

As premiums continue to increase, employers are looking to promote employee wellness programs to offset costs. Well documented research indicates a balanced lifestyle – including a proper diet, exercise and leisure time – leads to healthier and more productive employees. In turn, the employees’ medical utilization is reduced and health premiums drop. Additionally, a healthy workforce will have fewer sick days, be on time more often, and remain focused throughout the day. In contrast, other studies conducted on workplace stress indicate a stressful unbalanced lifestyle can lead to health risks and impact insurance premiums.

A major source of rising workplace health costs is the declining health of employees.  A new Gallup poll reports an astonishing six of every seven full-time employees in the US are overweight or suffer from a chronic health condition.  This is a terrible waste of human capital and an enormous burden on the bottom line, costing employers more than $153 billion a year in absenteeism alone.  We already know wellness programs can reduce costs.  A study last year by Harvard health economist Katherine Baicker found medical costs fell by $3.27 for every dollar spent on wellness programs.

Conclusion

While the future of health care reform remains uncertain and the cost of insurance will remain a large financial responsibility for employers, employers can take action to help reign in costs.  We have outlined a few strategies employers can explore to help manage these cost increases.  If you would like to learn more about how these strategies can work for your organization, please contact our office at 978.777.6554.