Average Health Insurance Premium $922 Higher Due to Healthcare
Costs of Uninsured
Pressures on Your Health Costs
Health Care Uncovered
Passing the
Buck to Mom & Dad
A Serious Drug
Problem
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Pressure on
Your Health Benefits
With costs still rising, companies are testing new ways to save.
The trendiest : workers pay more. After watching health-care
costs rise more than 60% in the past five years, most of
America's 177 million insured workers are bracing for another
dose of pain. As this November once again brings open-enrollment
season--that annual headache of working out how much more of our
paychecks will go to health benefits next year--2007 looks to
bring no relief. For the average employee, premiums and
out-of-pocket expenses will reach $2,904 a year for a family, up
$300 from 2006. That's the pass-along pain of the costs that
employers now endure, nearly $9,000 per employee, up an
estimated $518 from this year.Containing those costs is a new
corporate imperative. Among the tactics: bosses are skimping on
raises. They're being more restrictive about covering family
members and offering more preventive programs to keep workers
healthy--or at least forcing them to take more responsibility
for their health-care spending. That is, if they even offer
health benefits. Thirty-nine percent of companies offer no
medical benefits, up from 31% in 2000. About 60% of companies
say they expect coverage to decrease. So it's not surprising
that 80% of Americans polled say the system is broken. "Really
all humanity has been stripped out," says Cathi Shaefer, a
grocery clerk for the supermarket giant Safeway in Upland,
Calif. "The care of people is getting a lot less attention than
numbers."
The few companies that have been able to keep their costs
down could gain an advantage over rivals, since the disparity
between those paying the highest price for health care and those
paying the lowest is estimated at $3,000 per employee. For a
firm of 10,000 workers, that's $30 million, a chunk of change
that would have nearly any executive sweating his
competitiveness.
One antidote to the cost spiral: puny raises and fatter
deductibles. "Most companies realize they couldn't hire anybody
if they didn't offer medical benefits," says Helen Darling,
president of the National Business Group on Health. "But they
also expect employees to share more of the burden." Workers
can't help feeling it. According to Department of Labor
statistics, salaries rose 3% from June 2005 to June 2006, but
inflation rose 4.7% and health care 8%.
Those numbers won't change much in 2007. Someone making
$40,000 a year can anticipate a 4% pay increase next year.
(Don't spend it all in one place.) With health-care costs
expected to rise about 7%, that means at least 16% of that raise
would go to higher premiums or new out-of-pocket expenses.
Stated another way, your 4% raise is actually closer to 3%. Of
course, employers tend to look at it differently. "It's a
phenomenon we call the hidden paycheck because companies have
essentially been substituting health-benefit dollars for salary
and merit increases," says Ron Fontanetta of the
benefits-consulting firm Towers Perrin.
Companies are also saving money by cracking down on
eligibility and raising costs for extended family coverage. Many
have begun to impose a monthly surcharge of $50 to $200 to cover
spouses and partners who could otherwise get coverage from their
employer. Employees are now often paying more to cover their
dependents themselves. Following the automobile industry's lead,
many firms--about half of all businesses--are conducting audits,
requiring marriage licenses or birth certificates to verify
coverage for some spouses and dependents. Ford has cut more than
50,000 people from its rolls and Chrysler 26,000. That's a drop
in the bucket when you expect to spend $2.3 billion on health
care, Chrysler spokesman David Elshoff says, "but at that
amount, you're looking at every option to bring costs down."
In addition to being less generous, businesses are being less
paternal too, forcing workers to be more accountable for
spending, a practice called consumer-driven health care. One
immediate change has been a move away from fixed co-payments for
such medical expenses as doctor visits and prescription drugs.
That's being supplanted by coinsurance, under which the covered
person pays a percentage of the expense. Nearly half of
companies will have made the switch by next year. "The idea is
to get employees to think before heading to the doctor for a
cold," says Columbia University professor of health management
Sherry Glied, "to shop around a little for the best price."
Another option growing in popularity: high-deductible health
plans coupled with a reimbursement mechanism, most often a
health-savings account. Younger and healthier workers
increasingly select such coverage, which combines a deductible
of at least $1,000 with a tax-deferred savings account to which
employers sometimes contribute. Chicago-based accounting firm
Blackman Kallick offered its more than 200 employees the plan
this year. "About 10% chose it," says human-resources manager
Suzanne Palombi, "many more than we anticipated." For Blackman,
that equates to a 33% drop in premium costs for those workers.
Such savings from high-deductible plans, however, are most
likely short lived. A study by benefits-consulting firm Watson
Wyatt Worldwide found no correlation between high-deductible
plans and companies with the lowest health-care costs. And a
Rand Corp. report last week showed that people with such
coverage more often forgo necessary care--which generally leads
to greater expense later.
Indeed, most corporations are focused on giving employees
incentives to stay healthy. Some 60% promote preventive care
through wellness programs, including smoking cessation and
health-club discounts. "More than ever before, companies are
seeing the link between good health and productivity," says Beth
Bierbower, vice president of product innovation for insurance
provider Humana. "So they're engaging employees more on what
their personal needs are."
Humana offers customers several wellness components in their
plans. One includes a point system, designed by British firm
Virgin, in which a pedometer records an employee's movements.
Each step, with extra credit for exercise activities, is
converted into points that can buy music, sports equipment and
even airline tickets. At Illinois-based International Truck and
Engine Co., a similar program has its workforce racing CEO
Daniel Ustian to better health. A quarter of its 17,000
employees put in 27 miles a week.
It's not the walkers who are the problem, though. Since 10%
of employees account for 70% of costs, identifying and caring
for those at the highest risk for illness is a priority.
Employees at South Carolina's private utility SCANA who fill out
annual health assessments get a special break: their premiums
don't rise. Of the company's 15,000 workers, 94% took advantage
of that offer this year. The data SCANA and other companies
collect can then go toward disease management for such illnesses
as diabetes and high blood pressure. At International Truck and
Engine, where costs have remained flat the past two years,
health professionals call chronically ill employees regularly
(unless they opt out) to offer advice on care and medication.
SCANA provides drugs through an in-house pharmacy. "We then can
buy drugs at a wholesale price," says Joe Bouknight, SCANA's
human-resources director. "In 2007 that will represent a nice
discount for us and our employees." If only that were true for
the rest of us.
WEIGH HIGH DEDUCTIBLES
The price tag is attractive, but early adopters of
high-deductible plans (they include savings accounts) report
paying steep out-of-pocket fees and even skipping needed tests
or prescriptions.
USE PRETAX ACCOUNTS
Take advantage of tax savings with a flexible-spending
account (FSA) to pay for health expenses. In 2007, putting aside
$2,000 could save $500 in taxes. Just be sure to use it by March
2008.
DON'T PASS UP FREE CASH
Many employers offer wellness incentives like price breaks for
nonsmokers. Filling out a health-risk assessment could reduce
premiums or yield extra pay or attention to your health needs.
CHOOSE OR LOSE
Can't make heads or tails of your 2007 options? Don't
let that be an excuse to skip open enrollment. Your company may
automatically assign you its cheapest plan or even drop your
coverage.
THE COST OF HEALTH CARE HAS RISEN MORE THAN 60% IN
THE PAST FIVE YEARS.
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