News in Brief
Home
Complete archive of features and news articles, sample policies and procedures, assessments, and surveys.
Network and exchange ideas with other members in the forums or ask an expert in one of the hosted forums.
Access vendor directories, product case studies and showcases.
Read Best in Shows, view our conference calendar, read commentaries and take our news poll.
The Hot List
Blogs
Topic Channels
Comp, Benefits, Rewards
HR Management
Legal Insight
Recruiting and Staffing
Software and Technology
Training and Development
= Member Only
Workforce HR Jobs
Post Your Job
Post Your Resume



Subscribe Now
Workforce Magazine
Subscriber Help
























= Member Only


News in Brief: Fatal Flaw May Doom Consumer-Driven Health Plans
  

Fatal Flaw May Doom Consumer-Driven Health Plans
Consumer-driven health plans were designed to help slow rising health care spending by corporations. But the schemes may fail if employers don’t provide employees with proper education.
January 21, 2008
Fatal Flaw May Doom Consumer-Driven Health Plans
Consumer-driven health plans were designed to help slow rising health care spending by corporations. But the schemes may fail if employers don’t provide employees with proper education, finds a study released Tuesday, January 15, by the not-for-profit Employee Benefit Research Institute.

“Since the vast majority of Americans who have health coverage obtain it through their (or a family member’s) employer, and with health benefits on track to become the single-largest expense of any employee benefit, the issue of education is important, both to the sponsors and the beneficiaries of health insurance coverage,” study authors Lois Vitt and Ray Werntz say in the report.

Consumer-driven plans, which EBRI notes have several million participants, typically are more expensive and place more responsibility on the user. Such plans combine a tax-preferred account (a health savings account or health reimbursement account) with a high deductible, and users are expected to pay health costs either out of pocket or from one of their two accounts.

Advocates of such plans say that because employees shoulder the bill, they are motivated to keep health care costs low.

But the study finds that there is no consensus among policymakers that this will happen. In fact, the plans rely on employees making informed decisions about their health care choices. Lacking that knowledge, consumer-driven health care plans may fall flat.

Employers have been down this path before. The perceived ineffectiveness of employee education for 401(k) plans resulted in legislation to add “defaults” to these plans so that they no longer relied upon positive employee action. In the health arena, the report states, the default approach is exactly what the consumer-driven health model seeks to move away from.

The upshot? “Should health education initiatives prove ineffective, the consumer-driven health movement could well be doomed, especially if it relies upon fully educated health consumers taking self-initiated actions,” Vitt and Werntz say.

Filed by Megan Johnston of Financial Week, a sister publication of Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.

 


News in Brief Archive



Similar Documents

Related Topics









Copyright © 1995-2008 Crain Communications Inc.
All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use Privacy Statement