Don't Eat the Marshmallow

Originally posted by Troy Hammond on April 14, 2015 on www.linkedin.com.

Having more self-control than a preschooler can lead to more rewards.

Fifty years ago, psychologists at Stanford University conducted an experiment on preschoolers. During this test, researchers placed youngsters in individual rooms and asked each child to sit down in front of a tray containing one marshmallow. The child was given a choice: He or she could eat this marshmallow immediately or wait a little while for the researchers to place a second marshmallow on the tray—an opportunity to enjoy two treats instead of just one.

What did the kids do, what would you do, and what does the ability to delay gratification mean for future retirement success?

While encouraging kids to eat more candy wasn’t the goal of this multi-year study, it eventually led to a powerful conclusion: Children who “passed” the marshmallow test had greater competence and success later on as adults.1 Kids who successfully waited for the second marshmallow showed self-restraint and understood that not all needs require immediate gratification. This example is directly applicable to behavioral finance: Controlling spending now may lead to significant benefits in the future.

Patience is not just a virtue—it may create its own success

There are a few steps you can take today that potentially could lead to greater retirement success tomorrow. They include:

  • Enrolling in your 401(k). By setting aside money from each paycheck before you ever see it, you avoid unnecessary spending.
  • Making a habit of saving and increasing your plan contributions. Some experts say you should save 15% of your pretax income each year for your retirement, including your 401(k) and IRA. If your plan offers any employer matching contributions, take advantage of these as well.
  • Knowing when you may need professional advice. Those who lack confidence in their ability to manage their investments may be more prone to “cash out” at the worst time—at market lows—and wreck their retirement plan. Unless you are comfortable making your own investment decisions and making changes to your account as your retirement date nears, consider tapping professional advice that may be available to you within your employer’s retirement plan.

Self-control in retirement planning is key: By avoiding impulse spending and investing consistently over time to pursue rewards, you may move that much closer to securing your financial future.

1 Walter Mischel, The Marshmallow Test: Mastering Self-Control (New York: Little, Brown & Co., 2014).

Disclosure: This material was created for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended as ERISA, tax, legal or investment advice. LPL Financial and its advisors are providing educational services only and are not able to provide participants with investment advice specific to their particular needs. If you are seeking investment advice specific to your needs, such advice services must be obtained on your own separate from this educational material.


Supreme Court debates future of Affordable Care Act

Originally posted on March 5, 2015 by Ariane de Vogue on www.wqad.com.

WASHINGTON (CNN) — The future of health care in America is on the table — and in serious jeopardy — Wednesday morning in the Supreme Court.

After more than an hour of arguments, the Supreme Court seemed divided in a case concerning what Congress meant in one very specific four-word clause of the Affordable Care Act with respect to who is eligible for subsidies provided by the federal government to help people buy health insurance.

If the Court ultimately rules against the Obama administration, more than 5 million individuals will no longer be eligible for the subsidies, shaking up the insurance market and potentially dealing the law a fatal blow. A decision likely will not be announced by the Supreme Court until May or June.

All eyes were on Chief Justice John Roberts — who surprised many in 2012 when he voted to uphold the law — he said next to nothing, in a clear strategy not to tip his hand either way.

“Roberts, who’s usually a very active participant in oral arguments, said almost nothing for an hour and a half,” said CNN’s Supreme Court analyst Jeffrey Toobin, who attended the arguments. “(Roberts) was so much a focus of attention because of his vote in the first Obamacare case in 2012 that he somehow didn’t want to give people a preview of how he was thinking in this case. … He said barely a word.”

The liberal justices came out of the gate with tough questions for Michael Carvin, the lawyer challenging the Obama administration’s interpretation of the law, which is that in states that choose not to set up their own insurance exchanges, the federal government can step in, run the exchanges and distribute subsidies.

Carvin argued it was clear from the text of the law that Congress authorized subsidies for middle and low income individuals living only in exchanges “established by the states.” Just 16 states have established their own exchanges, but millions of Americans living in the 34 states are receiving subsidies through federally facilitated exchanges.

But Justice Elena Kagan, suggested the law should be interpreted in its “whole context” and not in the one snippet of the law that is the focus of the challengers.

“We look at the whole text. We don’t look at four words,” she said. Kagan also referred to the legal challenges to the law as the “never-ending saga.”

Justice Sonia Sotomayor was concerned that in the states where the individuals may not be able to receive subsidies, “We’re going to have the death spiral that this system was created to avoid.”

And Sotomayor wondered why the four words that so bother the challengers did not appear more prominently in the law. She said it was like hiding “a huge thing in a mousetrap.”

“Do you really believe that states fully understood?” she asked, Carvin, that those with federally run exchanges “were not going to get subsidies?”

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg suggested the four words at issue were buried and “not in the body of the legislation where you would expect to find” them.

Justice Anthony Kennedy asked questions that could be interpreted for both sides, but he was clearly concerned with the federalism aspects of the case.

“Let me say that from the standpoint of the dynamics of Federalism,” he said to Carvin. “It does seem to me that there is something very powerful to the point that if your argument is accepted, the states are being told either create your own exchange, or we’ll send your insurance market into a death spiral.”

He grilled Carvin on the “serious” consequences for those states that had set up federally-facilitated exchanges.

“It seems to me that under your argument, perhaps you will prevail in the plain words of the statute, there’s a serious constitutional problem if we adopt your argument,” Kennedy said.

The IRS — which is charged with implementing the law — interprets the subsidies as being available for all eligible individuals in the health exchanges nationwide, in both exchanges set up by the states and the federal government. In Court , Solicitor General Donald B. Verrilli, Jr. defended that position. He ridiculed the challengers argument saying it “revokes the promise of affordable care for millions of Americans — that cannot be the statute that Congress intended.”

But he was immediately challenged by Justice Antonin Scalia.

“It may not mean the statute they intended, the question is whether it’s the statute they wrote,” he said.

Although as usual, Justice Clarence Thomas said nothing, Justice Samuel Alito was also critical of Verrilli’s argument. He said if it were true that some of the states were caught off guard that the subsidies were only available to those in state run exchanges, why didn’t more of them sign amicus briefs. And he refuted the notion that the sky might fall if the challengers were to prevail by saying the Court could stay any decision until the end of the tax season.

On that point Scalia suggested Congress could act.

“You really think Congress is just going to sit there while all of these disastrous consequences ensue?” he asked.

Verrilli paused and to laughter said, “Well, this Congress? ”

Kennedy did ask Verrilli a question that could go to the heart of the case wondering if it was reasonable that the IRS would have been charged with interpreting a part of the law concerning “billions of dollars” in subsidies.

Only Ginsburg brought up the issue of standing — whether those bringing the lawsuit have the legal right to be in Court which suggested that the Court will almost certainly reach the mandates of the case.

President Barack Obama has expressed confidence in the legal underpinning of the law in recent days.

“There is, in our view, not a plausible legal basis for striking it down,” he told Reuters this week.

Wednesday’s hearing marks the third time that parts of the health care law have been challenged at the Supreme Court.

In this case — King v. Burwell — the challengers say that Congress always meant to limit the subsidies to encourage states to set up their own exchanges. But when only 16 states acted, they argue the IRS tried to move in and interpret the law differently.

Republican critics of the law, such as Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, filed briefs warning that the executive was encroaching on Congress’ “law-making function” and that the IRS interpretation “opens the door to hundreds of billions of dollars of additional government spending.”

In a recent Washington Post op-ed, Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, and two other Republicans in Congress said that if the Court rules in their favor, “Republicans have a plan to protect Americans harmed by the administration’s actions.”

Hatch said Republicans would work with the states and give them the “freedom and flexibility to create better, more competitive health insurance markets offering more options and different choices.”

In Court, Verrilli stressed that four words — “established by the state” — found in one section of the law were a term of art meant to include both state run and federally facilitated exchanges.

He argued the justices need only read the entire statute to understand Congress meant to issue subsidies to all eligible individuals enrolled in all of the exchanges.

Democratic congressmen involved in the crafting of the legislation filed briefs on behalf of the government arguing that Congress’ intent was to provide insurance to as many people as possible and that the challengers’ position is not consistent with the text and history of the statute.

Last week, Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia Mathews Burwell warned that if the government loses it has prepared no back up plan to “undo the massive damage.”


EEOC Issues Proposed Rule on Employer Wellness Programs

Originally posted by Rick Montgomery, JD on April 20, 2015 on thinkhr.com.

On April 20, 2015, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) issued a proposed rule that would amend the regulations and interpretive guidance implementing Title I of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) as they relate to employer wellness programs. The proposed rule amends the ADA regulations to provide guidance on the extent to which employers may use incentives to encourage employees to participate in wellness programs that include disability-related inquiries and/or medical examinations. The EEOC will accept public comments on the proposed rule until June 19, 2015, following which final regulations will be issued.

The EEOC has released a series of 10 questions and answers which outline the issues at hand, define terms involved in the proposed rule, and explain how wellness programs interact with regulations such as the ADA, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), and other federal nondiscrimination laws.

Employers do not have to comply with the proposed rule at this time; however, until final regulations are formulated, employers should take a careful look at their wellness programs to ensure compliance with the ADA, as many of the requirements set forth in the proposed rule are already requirements under the law.

At this time, employers should not:

  • Require employees to participate in a wellness program.
  • Deny health insurance to employees who do not participate in a wellness program.
  • Take any adverse employment action or retaliate against, interfere with, coerce, or intimidate employees who do not participate in wellness programs or who do not achieve certain health outcomes.

Further, employers should ensure that all employees are equally able to participate in any wellness programs or incentives offered, and that those employees needing reasonable accommodations to participate are offered those accommodations.


Truck Safety: Using a Seat Belt Matters

Originally posted on March 3, 2015 on cdc.gov.

Trucker safety requires an alert, buckled-up, experienced driver, with a reliable vehicle and strong employer safety programs. About 2.6 million workers drive trucks that weigh over 10,000 pounds (large trucks). About 65% of on-the-job deaths of US truck drivers in 2012 were the result of a motor vehicle crash. More than 1 in 3 truck drivers have had a serious truck crash during their career, and 1 in 8 has had 2 or more. Buckling up is both effective and required by federal regulations. But 1 in 6 drivers of large trucks don't use their seat belts (2013). More than 1 in 3 truck drivers who died in crashes in 2012 were not wearing seat belts. Buckling up could have prevented up to 40% of these deaths.

Employers can help truck drivers stay safe by:

  • Committing to driver safety programs at the highest level of leadership.
  • Establishing and enforcing driver safety policies, including requiring everyone in the truck to buckle up.
  • Involving workers in decisions about how to put seat belt programs in place.
  • Promoting seat belt use in training and safety meetings.
  • Addressing factors that contribute to crashes, such as drowsy and distracted driving, in their driver safety programs.

Read the full article here and download the infographic here.


AASHTO Introduces Toward Zero Deaths Plan to Reduce Roadway Fatalities

Originally posted by Tony Dorsey on March 10, 2015 on www.aashtojournal.org.

WASHINGTON - The American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) joined the National Strategy on Highway Safety Toward Zero Deaths (TZD) effort, a vision of eliminating fatalities on our nation's roadways.

The Toward Zero Deaths effort was created by a steering committee cooperative that includes numerous organizations committed to reducing annual US traffic fatalities from more than 33,000 to zero. The TZD Plan rolled out today provides organizations in the fields of engineering, law enforcement, education and emergency medical services (EMS) with initiatives and safety countermeasures designed to save lives.

"This national effort is a perfect example of why partnerships are so critically important," said Bud Wright, executive director of the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials. "The TZD National vision brings together a wide range of organizations and individuals under a unified commitment to transform our nation's traffic safety culture. Everyone has to be part of the solution -- including the nation's educators, roadway designers, engineers, law enforcement officers and motorists."

"We embrace the vision of Toward Zero Deaths; it provides an overarching and common vision that drives and focuses our efforts to achieve our shared goal to eliminate injuries and fatalities on our roadways," said U.S. Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx. "The U.S. Department of Transportation will do our part by aggressively using all tools at our disposal - research into new safety systems and technologies, campaigns to educate the public, investments in infrastructure and collaboration with all of our government partners to support strong laws and data-driven approaches to improve safety."

The National Strategy includes initiatives that are known to be—or are expected to be—effective in addressing specific factors contributing to roadway crashes, have the potential to make a significant reduction in fatalities and serious injuries nationally, or address areas of growing concern.

The TZD plan includes initiatives spanning from engineering to education with the intended result of achieving:

  • Safer drivers, passengers and pedestrians
  • Safer infrastructure
  • Safer vehicles
  • Enhanced emergency medical services and response
  • Improved management of traffic safety programs

AASHTO and State Departments of Transportation across the country are working to accomplish the TZD vision by:

  • Leading research and other activities to promote a culture of traffic safety in America.
  • Identifying new safety partners and promoting a collaborative, multidisciplinary, data-driven approach to safety related policies and programs.

"As leaders in the transportation industry, we have a duty and a responsibility to do what we can to accelerate the efforts to save lives on our nation's roadways," said Rudy Malfabon, P.E., director of the Nevada Department of Transportation and Chair of the AASHTO Standing Committee on Highway Traffic Safety. "Our mission is to one day rid the nation of all traffic fatalities and the TZD National Strategy will help us reach that goal faster."

For more than five years, organizations representing transportation, safety, law enforcement, engineering, and state and local government agencies--with the technical support of the Federal Highway Administration, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration—have been working together to identify and prioritize the leading initiatives that will reduce traffic fatalities over the next 25 years.

These organizations are leading the TZD effort:

  • American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators (AAMVA)
  • American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO)
  • Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance (CVSA)
  • Governors Highway Safety Association (GHSA)
  • International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP)
  • National Association of County Engineers (NACE)
  • National Local Technical Assistance Program Association (NLTAPA)
  • National Association of State Emergency Medical Services Officials (NASEMSO)

For more information about the Toward Zero Deaths National Strategy on Highway Safety, visit TowardZeroDeaths.org.


Final Rule to Revise the Definition of “Spouse” Under the FMLA

Originally posted on www.dol.gov.

The Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) entitles eligible employees of covered employers to take unpaid, job-protected leave for specified family and medical reasons. The FMLA also includes certain military family leave provisions.

The Department of Labor issued a Final Rule on February 25, 2015 revising the regulatory definition of spouse under the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993 (FMLA). The FMLA entitles eligible employees of covered employers to take unpaid, job-protected leave for specified family and medical reasons.

The Final Rule amends the regulatory definition of spouse under the FMLA so that eligible employees in legal same-sex marriages will be able to take FMLA leave to care for their spouse or family member, regardless of where they live. This will ensure that the FMLA will give spouses in same-sex marriages the same ability as all spouses to fully exercise their FMLA rights.

The effective date for the final rule is March 27, 2015.

On March 26, 2015, the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas, in Texas v. United StatesCivil Action No. 7:15-cv-00056 (N.D. Tex.), granted a request made by the states of Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana, and Nebraska for a preliminary injunction with respect to the Department's Final Rule revising the regulatory definition of spouse under the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA). The Government informed the Court of how the Government is complying with the injunction and the Government’s understanding of the scope of the injunction in a March 31 filing. A hearing date has been set for April 10th.

Major features of the Final Rule

  • The Department has moved from a “state of residence” rule to a “place of celebration” rule for the definition of spouse under the FMLA regulations. The Final Rule changes the regulatory definition of spouse in 29 CFR §§ 825.102 and 825.122(b) to look to the law of the place in which the marriage was entered into, as opposed to the law of the state in which the employee resides. A place of celebration rule allows all legally married couples, whether opposite-sex or same-sex, or married under common law, to have consistent federal family leave rights regardless of where they live.
  • The Final Rule’s definition of spouse expressly includes individuals in lawfully recognized same-sex and common law marriages and marriages that were validly entered into outside of the United States if they could have been entered into in at least one state.

Additional Information on the Final Rule.

Download the "Final Rule to Revise the Definition of 'Spouse' Under the FMLA" article here.

Download the Department of Labor - Wage and Hour Division's updated "Fact Sheet On The Final Rule" here.

Download the full text of the Final Rule here.

Download the FMLA Final Rule FAQs here.

Download the Press Release - "US Labor Dept. updates Family and Medical Leave Act's definition of spouse" here.

Download the FMLA - An Overview and News Updates here.


CDHP cost advantages extend for years

Originally posted March 30, 2015 by Alan Goforth on www.benefitspro.com.

Consumer-directed health plans can help contain health care spending for years after they're put into place, according to the first major study of its type.

“Do ‘Consumer-Directed’ Health Plans Bend the Cost Curve over Time?" released by the National Bureau of Economic Research, analyzes the three-year effects of CDHPs.

“We estimated spending trends for three years across … the country in an analysis estimating CDHP impacts, without the threat of individual level selection bias,” the authors of the study wrote. “We find that health-care cost growth among firms offering a CDHP is significantly lower in each of the first three years after offer. This result suggests that, at least at large employers, the impact of CDHPs persists and is not just a one-time reduction in spending.”

An unrelated study by the Society for Human Resource Management found that 19 percent of respondents that offer employee coverage said consumer-driven plans were the most-effective means of controlling the rising cost of health coverage.

Annual health care spending, according to the research bureau's findings, was 6.6 percent, 4.3 percent and 3.4 percent lower on average for the first three years, respectively, for companies with CDHPs when compared to companies without them.

CDHPs, which combine high deductibles with personal medical accounts, were designed to reduce health-care spending through greater patient cost-sharing. Several studies have shown that they reduce spending during the first year, but little research had been conducted into the longer-term economic impact. One concern was that CDHP enrollees would decrease their use of necessary care, which would lead to increased spending in the long term due to greater complications.

The National Bureau of Economic Research analyzed data from 13 million individuals in 54 large U.S. firms.

“We find that spending is reduced for those in firms offering CDHPs in all three years,” the report said. “The reductions are driven by spending decreases in outpatient care and pharmaceuticals, with no evidence of increases in emergency department or inpatient care.”

Researchers found that the CDHP savings effect varied considerably across spending category:

  •  Prescription drugs. Compared with firms not offering CDHPs, annualized spending growth on pharmaceuticals was 5 to 9.5 percentage points lower in the three years after firms offered CDHPs.
  •  Outpatient services. Spending growth on outpatient care was 3 to 6.8 percentage points lower in the first three years relative to non-offering firms.
  • Emergency room use. No differences were detected in cost growth for emergency room care in any of the first three years after a CDHP was offered.

Researchers caution against drawing implications for populations other than the ones studied.

"The results presented here are limited to large employers," the report said, "and therefore may not extend to Medicaid beneficiaries, the individual or small group market, or to the health insurance exchanges where, on average, deductibles and out-of-pocket maximums are higher and/or enrollees have fewer financial resources."

However, the longer-term study should alleviate some previous concerns.

“These findings do not support either the concern that decreases in spending will be a one-time occurrence or that short-term decreases in spending with a CDHP will result in increases in spending in the long term due to complications of foregone care,” it said.


CMS issues the final HHS Notice of Benefit and Payment Parameters for 2016

Originally posted on February 20, 2015 on www.cms.gov.

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has issued the Final HHS Notice of Benefit and Payment Parameters for 2016.  This rule seeks to improve consumers’ experience in the Health Insurance Marketplace and to ensure their coverage options are affordable and accessible.  This rule builds on previously issued standards which seek to make high-quality health insurance available to all Americans.  The final notice further strengthens transparency, accountability, and the availability of information for consumers about their health plans.

“We work every day to strengthen programs that deliver quality, affordable care to families across the country,” said CMS Administrator Marilyn Tavenner.  “CMS is working to improve the consumer experience and promote accountability, uniformity, and transparency in private health insurance.”

The rule finalizes the annual open enrollment period for 2016 to begin on November 1, 2015 and run through January 31, 2016, giving consumers three full months to shop.  To further aid consumers in finding a health plan that best suits their needs, the rule clarifies standards for qualified health plan (QHP) issuers to publish up-to-date, accurate, and complete provider directories and formularies.  Issuers also must make this information available in standard, machine-readable formats.

To enhance the transparency of the rate-setting process, the final rule includes provisions to facilitate public access to information about rate increases in the individual and small group markets for both QHPs and non-QHPs using a uniform timeline.  It also includes provisions to further protect consumers against unreasonable rate increases by ensuring more rates are subject to review.

To ensure consumers have access to high-quality, affordable health insurance, premium stabilization programs were put in place to promote price stability for health insurance in the individual and small group markets.  This rule includes additional provisions and modifications related to the implementation of these programs, as well as the key payment parameters for the 2016 benefit year.

Additionally, the rule will help consumers access the medications they need by improving the process by which an enrollee can request access to medications not included on a plan’s formulary.  The rule provides more detailed procedures for the standard exception process, and adds a requirement for an external review of an exception request if the health plan denies the initial request.  It also clarifies that cost-sharing for drugs obtained through the exceptions process must count toward the annual limitation on cost sharing of a plan subject to the essential health benefits requirement.  The rule also ensures that issuers’ formularies are developed based on expert recommendations.

The rule improves meaningful access standards by requiring that all Marketplaces, QHP issuers, and web brokers provide telephonic interpreter services in at least 150 languages in addition to the existing requirements regarding the provision of oral interpretation services, and strengthens other requirements related to language access.

To enhance the consumer experience for the Small Business Health Options Program (SHOP), the rule seeks to streamline the administration of group coverage provided through SHOP and to align SHOP regulations with existing market practices.

The final rule was placed on display at the Federal Register today, and can be found at:

https://www.federalregister.gov/public-inspection

CMS also released its final annual letter to issuer, which provides additional guidance on these and related standards for plans participating in the Federally-facilitated Marketplace.  The letter is available here:https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Fact-Sheets-and-FAQs/Downloads/2016-PN-Fact-Sheet-final.pdf


Self-insurance draws new converts among small employers

Originally posted by Richard Stolz on March20. 2015 on ebn.benefitnews.com.

An Affordable Care Act-fueled surge in self-insurance for medical benefits among smaller employers appears to have leveled off somewhat, but not due to any disenchantment with the cost-management strategy.

Rather, many that were open to giving self-insurance a try already have done so, observers suggest. Yet a steady flow of hold-outs continues to make the switch, and employers who already are self-insured are gaining the benefit of more competition among stop-loss carriers for their business.

“Brokers are continuing to ask us what we can do to help these groups,” says Rob Melillo, who is responsible for the medical stop-loss line at Guardian, a recent entrant to that market. Guardian began rolling out the coverage at the end of 2013, and has found a strong market among the small to mid-sized employers that represent its primary market for insurance sold to employers.

In 2013, 16% of employees at companies with fewer than 200 workers were covered under a self-insured plan, up from 13% two years prior, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.

Regulators ill at ease

Meanwhile, state insurance regulators have been expressing more and more concern about smaller employers moving to the self-insurance model, and are working to persuade their legislatures to adopt laws that would impede the trend. California already has done so, and several other states may be close behind.

The growing acceptance of self-insurance among smaller employers is not just about changes wrought by the ACA; the steady increases in health benefit costs are the underlying motivator.

“You’re going to have to make a serious change if you’re going to impact the health care spend,” observes Melillo. And switching from a fully insured model to self-insurance represents “serious change.”

Whereas employers with fewer than 500 employees and dependents were once generally deemed unsuitable for self-insurance, some stop-loss carriers today think nothing of signing up employers with 50 or fewer employees.

Presumably they can do so profitably. Employers suited to self-insurance anticipate savings in the 5% to 10% range, or more, industry participants say.

Part of that stems from savings from avoiding ACA-imposed taxes on fully insured plans. Beyond that, however, is the promise of employers gaining a better vantage point to identify and address specific problem spots in their plans.

The adage, “You can’t manage what you can’t measure,” applies perfectly to this arena, according to Melillo. “When you self-insure, you have access to every claim that’s submitted to your group, every aspirin, every complicated surgery. As that data grows, you can benchmark against industry norms,” and try to figure what’s causing any aberrations.

Although carriers offering fully insured plans typically also try to help employers in this regard, the transparency just isn’t the same, Melillo maintains.

Drilling down

He recalls once, when he was a broker, “drilling down” into some claims data concerning a client’s emergency room utilization. In doing so he discovered that a walk-in clinic used by many employees would code all services rendered after 5:00 p.m. as emergency room treatment, even though nothing had changed but the time of day.

With that insight the employer was able to adjust its plan design to preclude coverage for services at that clinic after 5:00 p.m.

The other fundamental draw of self-insurance is the fact that you are no longer “at the mercy of the carrier for what they will charge for risk pooling,” notes Michael Tesoriero, a consultant with Segal Consulting. That is, the claims experience of an employer that’s too small to be individually underwritten is aggregated with claims of other small employers, many of whose claims track records may be worse, leading to higher than necessary premiums.

Self-insuring also allows employers to:

  • Avoid being subject to state insurance regulation and mandates of benefits not otherwise required by federal law, such as fertility treatments required in some states;
  • Customize (within the broader confines of the ACA) the health plan design; and
  • Control funds reserved to pay health claims, and benefit – initially, last least – from the cash flow benefit of the lag between the accrual of claims, and having to pay them.

Role of community rating

In the ACA world, perhaps the biggest factor that has spurred greater interest in self-insurance among smaller employers is the community rating requirement, which virtually eliminates insurers’ ability to offer preferential rates to employees with healthy workforces.

On the flip side, however, some smaller employers with aging workforces and/or particularly bad claims experience might find community rating works to their advantage. But going that route might sap an employer’s motivation to take aggressive steps to lower employee claims through a focus on what Brian Ball, national vice president, employee benefit strategies and solutions for USI Insurance Services, calls “population health.”

Still, self-insuring isn’t for everyone. One consideration is the cost of stop-loss insurance, as well as the employer’s appetite for claims risk. For smaller employers, an important variable in the cost of stop-loss coverage is their degree of “credibility,” Ball says. That refers to the degree to which a stop-loss carrier will base premiums on the employer’s experience. Often only a portion of the premium will be based on experience, and the rest on a standard formula.

An employer with about 300-350 employees and dependents covered by the plan might be “50%-60% credible,” Ball says. It might take about 500 covered individuals before a stop-loss carrier would deem an employer group “fully credible,” according to Segal Consulting’s Tesoriero.

The larger the group, the less the potential for a year of unusually high claims making the stop-loss policy a losing proposition for the carrier. Stop-loss carriers also, of course, base premiums on the level of the “specific” limit (i.e. the dollar threshold for the stop-loss to begin absorbing claims for a particular individual over the course of year.

Naturally, the lower the threshold, the higher the premium.

Sending the wrong message

In addition, however, when specific low stop-loss thresholds are particularly low, the message to stop-loss carriers is that the employer isn’t fully buying into the self-insurance concept, and therefore may be less motivated to manage claims aggressively. That conclusion would tend to raise the premium as well.

From the employer’s perspective, the level of exposure must not be a cause of sleepless nights. Even smaller employers with balance sheets strong enough to navigate occasional claim spikes that fall below the specific limit have to consider the prospect of a truly horrendous year. That’s where setting the aggregate stop-loss level comes in.

Stop-loss carriers review the employer’s claims history, and produce a number that represents its estimate of total claims for the year. The aggregate limit, also called the attachment point, is set as a percentage (125% is typical) of expected total claims.

There can be some haggling on the estimate of total claims; the lower the number, the greater the probability of being protected by the aggregate limit. However, convincing a stop-loss carrier to make a significant adjustment is a rare event.

If the prospect of being on the hook for claims exceeding the norm by 25% (i.e. 125% of the total) is too daunting, “if you want to pay a little more [in premium], you can take it down to 120% or 115%,” says Ball.

Cash flow considerations

Another common source of employer anxiety is managing corporate cash flow when monthly claims bounce up and down dramatically. But recently a level-funding option has become more widely available. Under that arrangement the total expected claims for the year are divided into 12 equal monthly installments, with a reconciliation of variances at the end.

Several other relatively new bells and whistles are giving employers more options than before. Many state insurance regulators, meanwhile, are not thrilled by the growing popularity of self-insurance among smaller employers.

For one, they don’t like the fact that by self-insuring, employers are evading state-mandated benefits.

Another state concern is adverse selection – that employers with healthy employees (and thus lower costs) that self-insure leave carriers offering fully insured plans with a disproportionate share of high-claims policyholders, driving premiums higher and higher.

A third concern is that some self-insured arrangements with very low stop-loss limits are the functional equivalent of insured plans, and therefore are abusing the system by avoiding state regulation.

Last year California governor Jerry Brown signed a measure setting minimum specific deductibles for employers with under 100 employees at $35,000 (rising to $40,000 in 2016). Minimums are also set for aggregate stop loss, based on a formula.

The law contained several other provisions, including a ban on “lasering,” the carrier practice of demanding higher deductible levels or higher premiums for individuals expected to have unusually high claims due to history or a known ongoing critical illness.

Other states, including Rhode Island and Minnesota, are considering similar measures or have adopted less stringent ones.

Ball is not particularly nervous about the prospect of states’ stamping out self-insuring for smaller employers. In his view, unfolding market dynamics “can only improve” the appeal of self-funding.

New stop-loss options

Stop-loss carriers have been becoming more creative in recent times, according to Segal Consulting consultant Michael Tesoriero. The following are some examples he offers:

  • Caps on future rates. In some competitive situations carriers agree to limit rate increases for the next one or more years. This relieves employers of the risk of a big jump in rates following a year of high claims, when stop-loss thresholds were exceeded significantly.
  • Dividend-eligible policies. Sometimes offered to established clients, under these arrangements employers with below-than-expected claims can receive a slice of the savings the stop-loss carrier enjoys.
  • No new “laser” contracts. Often, stop-loss carriers, based on claims experience, will require an employer to accept a higher deductible, or pay a higher premium, for employees who are expected to have substantial claims over the course of the year, perhaps due to a chronic condition or ongoing critical illness. That is known as lasering. A “no new laser contract” is one limiting the carrier’s ability to establish new laser coverage.
  • Defined rate renewal formula. The carrier eliminates the subjective element of determining new rates at renewal. Instead, rates are adjusted based on a transparent formula linking specified premium increase percentages to the ratio of prior year claim reimbursement totals to premiums paid.