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Health Benefit Cost Containment: Controlling the Uncontrollable

Health Benefit Cost Containment: Controlling the Uncontrollable. David Carrell, REBC, CLU Area Senior Vice President dave_carrell@ajg.com www.gallagherbenefits.com. Agenda. History of Health Benefit Costs Cost Drivers Who’s to Blame? Funding Strategies Strategies for Cost Containment

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Health Benefit Cost Containment: Controlling the Uncontrollable

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  1. Health Benefit Cost Containment:Controlling the Uncontrollable David Carrell, REBC, CLU Area Senior Vice President dave_carrell@ajg.com www.gallagherbenefits.com

  2. Agenda • History of Health Benefit Costs • Cost Drivers • Who’s to Blame? • Funding Strategies • Strategies for Cost Containment • Role of Benefit Cooperatives

  3. History of Health Benefit Costs Ten Years of Trend

  4. What’s Driving Cost Escalation? • Technology/Research • Cost shifting – Government programs/uninsured • Malpractice premiums/defensive medicine • Health Care Professional – Wages and Benefits • Consumer behavior – “I want it all, I want the best, I want it now and I don’t want to pay for it!” • Waste/Inefficiencies/Fraud • State mandated benefits • Aging Population

  5. What’s Driving Cost Escalation? Average Life Expectancy

  6. Who’s to Blame? ?

  7. Who’s to Blame? The Perception: • Those ^&$^#@&*&*$ greedy insurance companies and their %$%#%^^#@%^& high-paid executives! Not Really: • “Insurance company profit margins, have been running at 6 to 7 percent” New York Times Milt Freudenheim “Cost of Health Insurance Rises Again, but at a slightly slower Rate” September 12, 2007

  8. Who’s to Blame? The Reality: • Consumers • Employers • Consultants • Health Care Providers • Insurance Carriers • Lawyers • Politicians

  9. Funding Strategies The proper choice of funding vehicle is integral to the cost-containment process but is not itself, a cost containment devise. Each funding vehicle must account for the components of health benefit costs; claims, expenses and incurred claim liability.

  10. Fully Insured • All risk assumed by carrier • Renewal rates determined by carrier • Employer’s claim experience blended with carrier’s book of business • Fixed expense components based on retention formula-Not actual costs • Normally no refund of excess premium in favorable claim years • Deficit incurred in one year may impact future years • Flexibility in plan design limited by carrier • Rule of thumb: Applicable to groups under 500 covered employees

  11. Partially Self-Funded • Most risk assumed by employer • Specific stop loss purchased to mitigate impact of catastrophic claims • Aggregate stop loss purchased to mitigate impact of unforeseen claim frequency • Renewal rates determined by employer • Excess “premiums” (surplus) remains in fund • High level of flexibility in plan design • Rule of thumb: Generally applicable to groups of 500 + covered employees

  12. Strategies for Cost Containment “We will either find a way, or make one.” Hannibal

  13. Cost Containment Tools • Short Term • Raise deductibles, copays, out of pocket limits • Increase employee contributions • Terminate Plan/Cash equivalents to employees

  14. Cost Leveraging Illustration Assumptions: $5,000 medical claim, $250 calendar year deductible, $1,000 out of pocket limit, 90/10 coinsurance, 11% annual trend

  15. Cost Containment Tools • Short/Long Term • Employee Assistance Plans (EAPs) • Disease Management • Consumer Directed Approach-HSAs or HRAs • Transform “Defined Benefit” to “Defined Contribution” (Taft-Hartley approach)

  16. Cost Containment Tools • Long Term • Education (newsletters, websites, “lunch and learns” • Sponsor/Fund Wellness programs (Diet, exercise, stress management, smoking cessation, etc.) “Everybody wants to go to heaven but nobody wants to die.” Loretta Lynn

  17. Wellness Initiatives • Why wellness? • The least expensive claim is the one that doesn’t occur. • Worker’s Comp risk is universally managed; Why not employee health risk?

  18. Wellness Initiatives • What is wellness? No single definition. • Worksite wellness screenings • Disease management • Plan design provisions ( adult/child well care allowance) • Lifestyle modification

  19. Wellness Initiatives • Is wellness worth the investment? • Depending on employee participation level, ROI varies from 5:1 to 20:1 (1) • Worker productivity: Reduce absenteeism by 2%, Increase productivity by 9% (2) • School district turnover is traditionally low. Intervention early in employees’ careers yields ROI to sponsoring district • Source: Proof Positive: An analysis of the Cost-Effectiveness of Worksite Wellness, Summex Health Management, Sixth Edition, 2006 • Source Pelletiuer B, Boles M, Lynch W. 2006

  20. Wellness Initiatives What are the wellness initiative basics? • Develop a strategy. Employ professional wellness firm. • Establish measurable goals. Use medical plan utilization data for baseline • Identify health risks. Rx data, on-site wellness screenings, health risk appraisals • Develop intervention programs for different groups: • Healthy Population: Exercise, nutrition, lifestyle modification • At-risk Population:Exercise, nutrition, lifestyle modification/lifestyle coaches • Chronically Ill Population: Above + disease management specialists • Modify according to participation, measurable results

  21. Cost Containment Process “One who attempts nothing will probably achieve it.” Anon “Doing nothing is very hard to do…you never know when you’re done” Leslie Nielsen

  22. Step 1 • Engage the Stakeholders via Advisory Committee • Duties and powers of Committee should be clearly defined. • Committee makeup should include representatives of employee constituent groups, other stakeholders • Outspoken, opinionated members; not whiney

  23. Who are the Stakeholders? • Employees • Certified and non-certified • Male and female • Young and “more mature” • Administrative Personnel • School Board Members • Taxpayers

  24. Step 2 • Define Fundamental Goals of the Plan • Examples: • Better balanced package (medical, dental, life, disability) • Cover “big ticket” costs • Emphasize disease prevention • Encourage/Reward healthy lifestyle initiatives

  25. Step 3 • Dissect current programs to determine how well they match-up with Plan Goals • Example: If employee wellness is goal, are there sufficient incentives in place to encourage high levels of participation?

  26. Step 4 • Rebuild benefit program in the image of the Advisory Committee “If you don’t change your direction, you might end up where you’re going.” Anon

  27. Step 5 Identify and record baseline data related to program changes: Examples: Claim $/employee Top 10 disease categories Generic vs brand name Rx utilization, etc.)

  28. Step 6 • Develop implementation strategy; short and long term • Determine what can be realisticallyimplemented in one, two or three year periods. • Consider impact of: Employees’ natural resistance to change Communication needs Vendor support.

  29. Step 7 • Begin implementation process via group meetings • Allow minimum six months prior to effective date of program changes • Assume big pushback from rank and file • Lead with rationale for program redesign. Use “gap analysis” to show impact of inaction on paychecks, retirement • Enlist committee members to make case to their constituents • If feasible, tie future compensation, benefits to success of plan

  30. Step 8 • Implement program. Prepare for: • Lots of questions • Confusion • Complaints • Finger-pointing • Make sure vendors and consultant and committee members committed to support implementation phase

  31. Step 9 • Meet quarterly with Advisory Committee to: • Monitor • Measure • Modify • The benefits marketplace is dynamic (HRAs, HSAs, teledocs, on-site clinics/pharmacies). Keep Committee members up-to-date on new developments.

  32. Benefit Cooperatives “All for one and one for all” Alexandre Dumas

  33. Role of Benefit Cooperatives • Benefit Cooperatives are formed to better contain costs by: • Sharing risk with other comparable size groups with common interests • Creating greater purchasing power and access in the insurance marketplace • Employing advantages of self-funding at a reduced risk to individual cooperative members • Gaining greater flexibility in plan designs • Create a forum for exchange of information among coop members

  34. How Do Benefit Cooperatives Control Costs? • Aggregating claims of all coop members flattens out “peaks and valleys” • Fixed costs of administration spread over more lives produces lower costs per employee • Greater credibility of claim experience (Law of Large Numbers) allows coop to assume greater risk and lowers cost of stop loss insurance

  35. Benefit Cooperative- Typical Financial Structure Member Units’“Premium $” $ Cooperative’s Fund Claims $ • Fixed Costs $ • TPA Administration’ • Reinsurance • EDP, Reporting Systems • Utilization Review • Actuarial • Consulting • Banking • Communication Material $ $ $ $ Interest Earned on Cash Flow

  36. Typical Benefit Cooperative Governance • By-laws • Board of Directors • Executive Committee • Advisors (non-voting) • Benefits • Accounting • Legal

  37. Questions? ?

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