Cost Fears Spur Companies to Amend Health Plans for 2009
Some employers, worried that costs will exceed their budgets, have changed plan designs to keep their budgets on an even keel as they head into a new year filled with economic challenges.
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October 14, 2008
Cost Fears Spur Companies to Amend Health Plans for 2009
Even as a majority of employers roll out next year’s health care plans,
consultants and benefits managers say the weakening economy is causing concern
that health care costs will be greater than projected.
Some employers,
worried that costs will exceed their budgets, began chang¬ing plan designs to
keep their budgets on an even keel as they headed into a new year filled with
economic challenges.
“We have seen a few employers put in last-minute
tweaks,” says Bob Tate, chief actuary for the health management practice at
Hewitt Associates in Atlanta. “They’re all reducing health care costs.”
“We’ve seen peaks
and valleys in premiums before,” says Drew Altman, president and CEO of the
Kaiser Family Foundation. “There is no evidence we’ve done much if anything to
deal with the fundamental underlying drivers of health care costs. So this
valley won’t last.”
Hewitt Associates projected health care costs to increase
by 6.4 percent in 2009, but those estimates were based on the health budgets of
large employers drawn up earlier this year when the economy showed less strain.
Jon Gabel, a senior fellow at the National Opinion Research Center and an
author of the Kaiser report, says a lag usually exists between the start of a
recession and the sharp jump in health care costs that follows, but the current
fiscal crisis will shorten the span. Lower expected earnings by insurance
companies could prompt an increase in rates and may be one reason brokers report
double-digit rate increases for small and medium-size employers in
California.
“Employees among large employers … don’t
seem to be enamored with these high-deductible plans,” Gabel says. “Maybe with
the economic downturn they’ll be more price-sensitive with these plans, but last
year that was not the case.”
Sicker employees, though, could be more likely
to absorb premium increases so they can stay in more generous plans. Without
healthy employees to subsidize the cost of the sick, those plans could see a
cost spike, Gabel says.
To avoid such a scenario, nutritional supplement
retailer GNC of Pittsburgh will no longer allow employees into low-deductible
plans until they’ve been employed one year. The company tried raising premiums
for that plan, but has not worked to get employees to move toward the company’s
higher-deductible plans.
GNC benefits manager Gene Leis says he’d rather
limit people’s eligibility for the low-deductible plan than go overbudget and
risk layoffs and closing stores.
“A 1 percent increase [in health care costs]
is the profit from two stores,” Leis says. The company has about 2,500 stores.
“Do you want to open two new stores or close them? If you close stores and lay
people off, you make money right now.”
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