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Health Insurance Costs to Rise
Again
(10/10/2005)
Source: The Chicago Tribune
The cost of providing
health insurance to employees is expected to go up nearly
10 percent in 2006, nearly triple the rate of inflation.
The portion paid by
workers will surpass the 20 percent mark, rising 11.6
percent, to $1,612 per employee.
If projections hold, it
would be the second straight year employers' premiums rose
less than 10 percent, according to an annual study of
health insurance costs by Lincolnshire-based Hewitt
Associates in preparation for the 2006 open-enrollment
season that has just begun for large employers.
"The cost increases that
we are seeing are coming down from the past couple of
years," said David Stacey, a senior consultant for Hewitt,
referring to the 14.7 percent and 12.3 percent increases
nationally in 2003 and 2004, respectively. "But we still
expect increases in the high single digits for the next
two or three years."
Nationally, workers on
average will pay more than $134 per month for their annual
health insurance, more than double what they paid five
years ago, according to Hewitt. Plus, out-of-pocket costs
for co-payments, drugs and other non-covered expenses are
expected to rise 11 percent, to $1,524 a year.
Analysts say premiums are
higher because the cost of medical care continues to rise
across the board.
"It is a mix of the entire
inflation piece," Stacey said. "It is not just one thing."
Employees' share of health
insurance costs continues to grow. Next year's 20 percent
of the premium is up slightly from 19.7 percent in 2005.
In 2000, employees paid about 16 percent of the costs.
"The cost of health care
is one of the largest expenses many organizations face,"
Stacey said. "Employers are having their employees pick up
an increasing share of that cost so that they may remain
competitive in the marketplace."
A $40,000-a-year employee
who receives a 3.6 percent raise, or $1,440, will use
nearly a quarter of it, $326, to pay for the increase in
health insurance and out-of-pocket costs, Hewitt said.
Hewitt's survey primarily
focuses on large employers with 9,000 to 50,000 employees.
For smaller companies, employees tend to pay more than
those tracked by Hewitt because they have fewer premium
dollars to spread over the health costs of their workers.
They also don't usually have the clout when negotiating
rates with insurers.
Chicago-based
Benefitdecisions Inc., which provides health-benefits
consulting to employers in the 2- to 500-employee range,
said its clients "are asking employees to pay 30 to 35
percent [of the premium] for single coverage and closer to
50 percent for family coverage," said Dan Wilke, director
of underwriting.
As workers shoulder a
larger burden, employers are taking some new approaches to
controlling costs.
Chicago-based Globalcom
Inc. will see its health-care costs rise 1 percent in
2006, thanks in large part to its decision last year to
add a
consumer-driven health plan to such traditional
offerings as HMOs and
preferred-provider organizations.
Whereas HMOs restrict
medical-care-provider choices to their networks, and PPOs
use preferred lists of doctors and hospitals to control
costs, consumer-driven plans are a relatively new
insurance that allow employees or the employer to decide
how much they want to spend on health-care services.
Consumer-driven plans
offer networks or providers of choices, like other health
plans, while setting aside a defined amount of money to
put toward medical costs, deductibles and co-payments.
The consumer-driven plan
often is attached to a health savings
account, which holds the defined amount for employees
to use toward their medical costs. Any unused dollars
usually can be rolled into the next year's account.
Globalcom offered two
consumer-driven plans sold by
Humana Inc., one
with an annual deductible of $1,000 and another with a
$2,500 deductible. For participating employees, Humana
pays the first $500 toward out-of-pocket costs before the
deductible would kick in, requiring employees to pay the
next $1,000 or $2,500. After that, the insurance turns
into something similar to a PPO.
The new plans can lead to
greater out-of-pocket costs, depending on how much money
the insurer or employer provides toward deductibles.
Further, critics say high-deductible plans can cause
workers to avoid trips to the doctor if they are worried
they are going to exhaust the money employers or insurers
provide toward deductibles.
Consumer-driven health
plans are most popular with smaller employers.
Benefitdecisions said about one-third of its clients offer
a consumer-directed plan.
And more larger companies
are moving to add consumer-driven plans as an option for
their employees, according to Hewitt. This year, Stacey
said, 15 percent of companies offered a consumer-driven or
defined-contribution plan as an option with traditional
plans. In 2006, Hewitt's Stacey projects one in four
companies will offer such consumer plans.
Preventive steps
In addition to the
consumer model, employers are stepping up wellness
programs and preventive health screenings as ways to keep
workers from the more expensive inpatient hospital
setting.
For example, the insurance
program for 4 million federal employees administered by
Blue Cross and Blue
Shield plans next year for the first time to offer
coverage for four visits to a nutritional counselor as a
way to address the nation's obesity epidemic.
"We're doing as much as we
can to help people live a healthier lifestyle and give
them as much as we can upfront," said Fred Plumb,
executive director for the Blue Cross and Blue Shield
Federal Employee Program. "We recognize the role of the
health insurance carrier is no longer just paying the
claims."
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