Obama Administration Unveils Health Insurer Fees

March 1, 2013

By Kathryn Mayer

The Internal Revenue Service unveiled its proposal to raise billions of dollars through annual fees on health insurers, a “$100 billion health insurance tax rule” that the industry says will significantly drive up costs for consumers.

The rule as part of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act imposes annual fees on health insurers that start at $8 billion in 2014, increases to $14.3 billion in 2018, and will increase every year after that. The Joint Committee on Taxation estimates the tax will exceed $100 billion over the next ten years.

The proposed rule will be published Monday for public consideration in the Federal Register. The IRS will accept comments for 90 days, beginning Monday.

Not paying on time will result in a $10,000 penalty for insurers, plus $1,000 for every day they miss deadline.

America’s Health Insurance Plans blasted the rule as a tax that will financially drown both employers and consumers. They warn that the costs will have to be passed along to consumers in the form of higher premiums, a claim that the Congressional Budget Office has also verified in its analysis.

“Imposing a new sales tax on health insurance will add a financial burden on families and employers at a time when they can least afford it,” AHIP President and CEO Karen Ignagni said Friday. “This tax alone will mean that next year an individual purchasing coverage on his or her own will pay $110 in higher premiums, small businesses will pay an additional $360 for each family they cover, seniors enrolled in Medicare Advantage will face $220 in reduced benefits and higher out-of-pocket costs, and state Medicaid managed care plans will incur an additional $80 in costs for each person enrolled.”

There is currently legislation to repeal the fees, recently introduced by Reps. Charles Boustany, R-La., and Jim Matheson, D-Utah, which AHIP strongly supports.

A 2011 report by Oliver Wyman found that nationally the health insurance tax alone “will increase premiums in the insured market on average by 1.9 percent to 2.3 percent in 2014,” and by 2023 “will increase premiums 2.8 percent to 3.7 percent.”

Families purchasing coverage in the individual market will be hit the hardest in New York while those getting coverage from a small employer will be most impacted in West Virginia, Oliver Wyman analysis also found. Medicare Advantage beneficiaries in New Jersey and the Medicaid managed care program in Washington, DC top their respective lists of those that will be hardest hit by the tax.

Source: https://www.benefitspro.com/2013/03/01/obama-administration-unveils-health-insurer-fees


5 Steps to Assess Employees' Benefits Eligibility Under PPACA

Source: https://ebn.benefitnews.com

By Laurie S. Miller

"Health care reform is overrated," a broker responded flippantly to his (now former) employer-client after the employer initiated the call. "I'll email you a one-page cheat sheet." The client had reached out to his broker following a two-hour presentation about the impact of health care reform from the broker's competitor. This was the same broker who, for the last two years, had faxed over the client's renewal and had delegated the servicing of the employees to the client's bookkeeper. Shaking his head, the client hung up the phone, then dialed his broker's competitor and moved the business.

Consulting firms around the nation have deployed significant resources and compliance teams to help clients proactively manage the strategic, financial and operational impact of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. There are significant penalties for noncompliance so it is important that employers keep up with the regulations. In addition, employers may see increased enrollment as employees seek to comply with the individual mandate, which requires coverage.

Eligibility for coverage is one area that employers need to assess. PPACA defines a full-time employee as working 30 hours per week. Many employers currently set their eligibility threshold at a higher level, such as 35 or 40 hours a week.

"We could potentially have 40 new enrollees on our plan," pointed out one human resources executive at a recent health care reform seminar, as she weighed the cost impact.

If your plan defines eligibility as greater than 30 hours a week or excludes certain classes of employees (for example, a nine-month non-certified employee at a school vs. a 12-month employee), this is the time to assess the impact of the legislation and determine an action plan. Here's a checklist to get you started:

1. Review employees who currently waive the plan. Model potential plan costs if these employees join the health plan.

2. Review employees who are currently ineligible due to higher eligibility thresholds (greater than 30 hours per week.) Assess the financial impact of newly eligible employees joining the health plan.

3. Review variable-hour employees. If they exceed an average of 30 hours a week during the measurement period, they may be eligible for benefits.

4. Are partial-year employees eligible for coverage? (i.e., nine-month employees who don't work during the summer months?) If currently excluded, assess potential impact if they exceed 30 hours per week.

5. Review seasonal employees. Do they exceed 120 days per year? They may be eligible for benefits.

There are many other components to developing a strategic approach to health care reform. Look for a broker that offers a proprietary financial modeling tool that can help your company determine a cost-effective strategy for the future.

 


Seven Health Tax Tips

Source: https://www.benefitspro.com

By Kathryn Mayer

It's everyone's favorite time of year: Tax season. Do you know how to make the most of it?

According to eHealth, many consumers overlook credits and deductions built into the tax code designed to make medical care and health insurance more affordable. Consumers who had high medical expenditures in 2012, who were self-employed or owners of small businesses, or who cared for aging parents, should especially educate themselves on the opportunities to deduct a portion of their expenses from their federal income taxes.

Here are seven health and health insurance tax tips to consider when completing federal income taxes, courtesy of eHealth.

Itemize medical expenses while you can. Not everyone has medical expenses high enough to deduct them on their federal tax returns, but even fewer will be able to do so next year. 2012 is the last year you’ll be able to itemize and deduct medical expenses in excess of 7.5 percent of your adjusted gross income. As a result of health reform, that threshold is being raised to 10 percent for the 2013 tax year. So, if you itemize on your federal tax return, do the math. Qualifying medical expenses in excess of 7.5 percent of your adjusted gross income for 2012 may be itemized.

You can refer to IRS Publication 502 for more information about qualifying medical expenses, but these may include monthly premiums you pay for coverage (including some Medicare premiums), copayments, deductibles, dental expenses and costs for some services not covered by your insurance plan. You may even deduct mileage accrued while driving to and from regular appointments. This deduction isn’t for everyone, but if you (or one of your dependents) were seriously ill or hospitalized last year, you may qualify.

Consider expenses for the care for an aging parent. If your elderly parent earned less than $3,800 in 2012 (excluding Social Security in most cases) and you provided more than half of his or her financial support, you may be able to claim your parent as a dependent. This earns you an additional dependent exemption, even if your parent doesn’t live with you. And if you’ve paid for the medical or nursing care of a dependent parent, you also may be able to itemize your costs as qualified medical expenses.

Medicare premiums and medical home improvements. If you’re a retired senior, you may have an easier time meeting the 7.5 percent adjusted gross income threshold to deduct itemized medical expenses on your federal return. In addition to your out-of-pocket expenses for medical, dental or vision care, you also may be able to include capital expenses for the installation of home medical equipment or improvements of your property for wheelchair access. In addition, premiums taken from your Social Security check to pay for Medicare Part B may qualify as deductible, as well as premiums you paid for Medicare Part D (Prescription Drug) coverage or a Medicare Supplemental plan.

Deducting health insurance premiums as a business expense. If you had self-employment income in 2012, you may be able to deduct health insurance premiums you paid for yourself and your dependents as an ‘above the line’ business expense (that is, without itemizing) on your federal tax return. Be aware, however, that you may not deduct premiums (including Medicare premiums) paid for any month in which you were eligible to participate in an employer-sponsored health insurance plan, and the amount you deduct cannot be greater than your net self-employment income for the year. Also, keep in mind that you cannot include what you paid toward your monthly premiums as an ‘above the line’ expense and also itemize it. Talk to a tax professional to learn more about the different types of self-employment status and the tax implications of each in your state.

Fund your HSA for 2012. An HSA is a tax-advantaged savings account used in conjunction with an HSA-eligible health insurance plan. Account contributions, qualified distributions and earnings are all tax-exempt. An HSA allows you to deposit a portion of your pre-tax income into a savings account and use those funds to pay for qualified medical expenses. Unused money can be invested and accrue from year to year. If you have an HSA, be sure to deduct your contributions up to federally prescribed limits. Contributions to your HSA designated for 2012 and made before April 15, 2013 can be counted toward your 2012 federal taxes. According to the IRS, HSA contributions for the 2012 tax year are capped at $3,100 for individuals and $6,250 for families. If you’re over age 55, you may qualify to make an additional $1,000 contribution for the year.

Get tax credits for providing employees with coverage. If you’re a small business owner providing group health insurance coverage for your workers, don’t forget that there may be special tax credits available to you. If you have 25 or fewer employees with average annual wages of less than $50,000, you may be eligible for a special tax credit of up to 35 percent of the amount you contribute toward employee insurance premiums. Starting in 2014, that credit will increase to 50 percent. Keep in mind that in order to qualify for the credit you must have paid at least fifty percent of your employees’ total monthly premiums.

Start thinking about tax changes for 2014. Once you’ve completed your taxes this year, take a look at your income and see if you’ll qualify for a federal health insurance subsidy in 2014. If your adjusted gross income was less than 400 percent of the federal poverty level (that’s about $45,000 for a single person or $92,000 for a family of four, in 2012 dollars), you may qualify for a government subsidy in 2014. Failure to obtain health insurance in 2014 could result in a tax penalty. Another change: starting this year, you may notice a new dollar figure in Box 12 of your W-2. If you have employer-based health insurance, the cost of your coverage is reported to the IRS here. You are not taxed on this amount, but so-called “Cadillac” plans (with aggregate values of over $10,200 for individual coverage or $27,500 for families) may be subject to an excise tax starting in 2018.

 


11 Small Changes to Help Workers Manage Their Stress

Source: https://safetydailyadvisor.blr.com

You can't eliminate the stress your employees bring to work, but you can identify and eliminate organizational stressors. And you can provide tools and information to help workers manage their stress on their own.

Stress management expert Susie Mantell (www.relaxintuit.com) is a firm believer in the power of incremental steps when trying to manage stress on the job and at home. Here are some ideas Mantell recommends that you can use for a safety meeting on stress management:

·         Prioritize, streamline, delegate, and discard. When facing a task, ask if it's really necessary to do today, if there's an easier way to do it, or who might be able to help.

·         Break it up. Take 2- to 3-minute breaks every hour throughout the workday. Mantell also urges employees to "commit to doing one fun thing every single day without exception." Laugh, play a game, or cook a meal, as long as it's enjoyable.

·         Make time. Build time into your schedule for creative expression, healthy eating, moderate daily exercise, time with friends, and time in nature.

·         Be on time. "Last minute equals high risk," says Mantell. Running late creates stress in us as well as in others. Build in cushion time between appointments to allow for traffic and the unexpected.

·         Send negativity flying. If a co-worker is on the warpath, visualize an airplane with an advertising banner over that person's head. Imagine each negative word floating up into the banner, flying by and out of view. "Getting out of the line of fire can defuse a tense moment and preclude anxiety and stress," Mantell explains.

·         Relax and watch what happens. Do mini-meditations or mindful breathing while you're shifting between tasks or in line at the cafeteria. Getting a message, rocking a baby, rebuilding an engine, or playing an active sport can also produce a meditative state of relaxation.

·         Get essential nutrients. Go beyond vitamins and begin to think about daylight and laughter as essential daily nutrients. Get outside and take in some fresh air, even if it's just 10 minutes on a wintry day.

·         Consider what you're consuming. Rethink the role played by sugar, caffeine, and alcohol in your life. These can increase stress levels.

·         Watch your words. Negative internal chatter and self-recrimination are distracting and demoralizing. Never say anything to yourself that you wouldn't say to your best friend.

·         Be kind. Do something kind for a different co-worker every day. Mantell points to the "cumulative, positive transformation that takes place when it becomes second nature to create joy and reduce stress for others."

·         Sleep on it. Sleep deprivation is threatening to become an epidemic in the United States, and stress is a major culprit. Try to get restful, restorative sleep every day, and watch your stress level decline.

 


6 key compliance deadlines for 2013 and beyond

Source: https://ebn.benefitnews.com

By Kathleen Koster

For plan sponsors, 2013 is a year of crossing Ts and dotting Is on PPACA compliance for their health care plans and strategizing for next year, when the employer mandate and public exchanges go into effect. The health care reform law has many moving parts and a great deal of regulations yet to come, which will keep benefits professionals on their toes all year.

"Employers have never experienced this complexity and oversight in compliance for their health plans. Employers are used to a compliance-rich environment around their retirement plans, but they need an equally robust and hands-on approach to managing the compliance of their health plans," says Mike Thompson, a principal in the human resources services practice of PricewaterhouseCoopers. He adds that "the rules, regulations and level of enforcement have never been greater."

Thompson believes "2013 is a period of strategic re-evaluation of whom the employer will provide benefits to in light of the changes in the individual market allowing guaranteed issue and subsidies for lower- and middle-income Americans."

He believes that employers will also transition around financing as "more employers look at community-type programs with the interest of moving away from their own programs and potentially contributing towards a private exchange or facilitating access to coverage in the open market."

To help employers keep all their compliance ducks in a row while managing and determining long-term strategies for their plans, EBN asked legal and health care experts for top issues to keep in mind for 2013 and beyond.

1. Preparing for the 2014 employer mandate

"At the top of the list is the interpretation of employer responsibility provisions that includes what constitutes minimum essential coverage that employers have to provide or be subject to penalties. Along with that, there are very important issues around the minimum value of the coverage they provide as well as who they have to provide it to," says Paul Dennett, senior vice president of health care reform at the American Benefits Council.

The employer mandate applies only to large employers. Whether an employer is defined as large under PPACA (generally companies with 50 or more employees) depends on the number of its full-time equivalent employees. Companies with 50 or more full-time workers (averaging at least 30 hours per week) must offer minimum health care coverage that is affordable.

In 2013, an employer ought to be determining whether it is a large employer and, therefore, subject to the mandate. "If they offer coverage in 2014, the coverage must meet the minimum value standards and the contributions the employer requires of employees cannot be so high the coverage is unaffordable relative to the employee's household income," says Jean C. Hemphill, practice leader of Ballard Spahr's health care group.

To determine the minimum value, fully insured plans will rely on their insurance carrier for information on whether they meet the minimum value of 60% for their plan. Self-insured plans can turn to an actuary or determine their value with the aid of a government-provided calculator or government-provided checklists.

When it comes to determining the affordability of the plan, an employer cost-sharing arrangement must be affordable relative to the employees' household income, as stated under PPACA. So, "the employee's contribution and cost-sharing obligations can't exceed 9.5% of their household income," says Hemphill.

However, the IRS acknowledges that employers don't know workers' household income, and suggests employers use W-2 wage information instead to determine their plan's affordability.

Hemphill expects more guidance on this issue since employees' contributions are typically much greater for dependents coverage than their own. An employee offered otherwise qualifying coverage by their employer can't use the public exchange unless they prove their employer-sponsored coverage is unaffordable.

The affordability issue may be of greater concern to employers with fairly low-income workforces or for employers not offering comprehensive plans to employees or all employees, such as the mini-medical plans sometimes offered in the retail industry. Employers only need to offer one affordable plan with minimum value to satisfy the rules, however mini-medical plans will be illegal after 2014.

Actuarial experts predict that most high-deductible health plans with deductibles in the $2,000-$3,000 range will most likely qualify, however those with much higher cost-sharing may not meet the minimum value.

While sponsors can vary the deductible and coinsurance amount of HDHPs, they should remember that the higher the deductible, the lower actuarial value of the plan.

"There are variables that can be adjusted in the plan design, but the most important one is where to set the amount of the deductible," says Dennett. He adds that guidance so far has indicated employer contributions toward HSAs or credits toward HRAs will count toward the minimum value. The question is whether the amount contributed is counted 100% to the plan or if it is discounted in the actuarial value formula that HHS would use in the calculation of actuarial value coverage.

Overall, "the Affordable Care Act was designed so employers don't need to make too many plan design changes to their plan," says J.D. Piro, national practice leader for Aon Hewitt's health and benefits legal department. "They may need to open it up to more employees but, generally speaking, they should be able to meet the affordability and minimum value requirements."

2. Public exchanges

Employers are required to provide employees with notice alerting them of the existence of public insurance exchanges. It is thought that the government will issue a model notice for this purpose. At press time, the government had yet to produce this model notice or other guidance about the notice requirement. The March 1 notification deadline has been extended until "late summer or fall," according to a recent FAQ announcement from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

"There may still be unanswered questions about whether the state exchanges, partnership exchanges or the federal exchanges are really at an operational readiness stage to be able to go live as of October 2013," says Dennett.

Assuming the exchanges are on track and sponsors receive the guidance they need, they should expect many questions from workers about how the process affects them.

"While most major employers will continue to offer coverage to employees, there will be some confusion around the availability of coverage in the public exchanges and what the implications are [for employees] getting coverage from their employer, says Thompson.

He suggests employees will primarily want to know:

* Do I still have coverage through my employer?

* Am I eligible to get coverage through the exchange?

* Can I potentially get subsidies through the exchange?

* Is it in my best interest to go through the exchange?

3. Waiting periods

Another design-related issue employers must factor into their plans is that under PPACA, waiting periods for health care coverage cannot exceed 90 days. The 90-day period begins when the employee is otherwise eligible for coverage. Employers with a high-turnover workforce that currently have long waiting periods will have to shorten them.

If an employer requires employees to work a minimum number of hours to qualify for coverage, it may need to monitor workers' timesheets in 2013 to determine if and when coverage needs to be offered in 2014; this may be complicated for seasonal employees and other employees with variable hours.

Thompson believes this is part of a larger question of meeting qualifications for providing coverage.

"It's part of a package in my mind," he says. "Employers must evaluate employee classes when looking at whether they meet the minimum threshold of providing coverage to full-time employees. Seasonal, temporary, or contract workers are classes that need to be evaluated in order to avoid or at least understand what the penalties might be."

4. Pre-existing and non-discrimination prohibitions

"The non-discrimination rules are new for insured plans in 2014," says Hemphill. Even though these prohibitions should already be in effect, government agencies have delayed enforcement until they release regulations.

"It will be an important issue because right now there is no requirement to offer coverage to part-time employees, but with the definition of full-time employees as an average of 30 hours per week and new non-discrimination testing rules, the employer obligation may be different," she says.

Either way, employers can expect notice and guidance well before implementation because, "it is a big plan design issue," says Edward I. Leeds, counsel in the employee benefits and executive compensation group at Ballard Spahr.

5. Wellness programs

PPACA includes rules that prohibit plans from discriminating against individuals based on a range of health-related factors. Plans cannot impose restrictions on eligibility or increase employee costs for coverage based on these factors.

"When the government issued guidance under ACA, they actually revised the HIPAA regulations. So now the ACA and HIPAA rules ... will be the same," says Leeds. "By and large the rules follow HIPAA with some changes, the most significant of which is that the potential reward for meeting requirements under the wellness programs will increase as of January 1, 2014."

The potential reward for meeting a wellness requirement will increase from 20% of cost of coverage to 30% of cost of coverage. Incentives related to tobacco cessation will increase up to 50%. (For more details, read "Regs increase wellness rewards," page 28.)

6. Upcoming fees and taxes

Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, established by PPACA, will collect and publish information about clinical effectiveness of treatments for patients. It will be paid for through fees assessed against insurers and self-funded plans equal to $2 ($1 in the first year) per covered life. The assessment will last seven years and eventually be adjusted for inflation. Employers with self-funded plans will need to report and pay these fees starting in July 2013.

The Transitional Reinsurance Program aims to stabilize the individual health insurance market as insurers provide coverage, starting in 2014, to large numbers of individuals who do not currently have coverage and present uncertain risks. The program will provide reinsurance payments to insurers that take on high-risk individuals. The program is funded through a three-year tax (expected to be $63 per covered life in the first year.)

The Additional Medicare Tax, in effect this year, is an additional 0.9% tax applied to high-income individuals. Employers are responsible for withholding the tax from wages or compensation it pays to an employee in excess of $200,000 in a calendar year.


Fight Back Against Workplace Stress

Source: https://safetydailyadvisor.blr.com

Stress is a big problem in the workplace, and the signs are everywhere.

Ever awaken at 3 a.m. in a sweaty panic over a work problem, a presentation you have to make, or looming deadline? Maybe you've lost your temper with the kids when the real problem was related to work.

The signs and symptoms of job stress are many and diverse—from a racing pulse to skipped meals, headaches, weight gain, depression, and lack of energy.

Whatever the cause, and however it manifests, workplace stress continues to be a problem—one that can cause reduced productivity, increase in accidents, and a spike in costs.

Stress Stats

The American Psychological Association (APA) observes that, "While stress levels appear to be balancing out, they remain high and exceed what Americans consider to be healthy."

No time to write safety meeting materials? You don't need to with the 50 prewritten safety meeting modules in BLR's Safety Meeting Repros program. All meetings are ready to use, right out of the box.

According to the APA and other sources:

·         69 percent of employees say work is a significant source of stress, and 41 percent say they typically feel tense or stressed out during the workday.

·         51 percent of employees report that they have considered or made a decision about their career (such as leaving a job or declining a promotion) based on workplace stress.

·         While more than half of adults say they are doing a good or excellent job of knowing when they feel stressed, half of them aren't doing as well at preventing stress.

·         Although 94 percent of adults believe stress can contribute to the development of major illness, a sizeable majority still thinks that stress has a slight or no impact on their own health.

·         More employees are reporting that their employers provide sufficient opportunities for them to be involved in decision making, problem solving, and goal setting—one hopeful sign, since these are all steps believed to reduce employee stress.

Signs of Stress

As if life outside of the workplace isn't stressful enough for most people, when they come to work, they often encounter more stress—lack of control over work, heavy workloads, productivity demands, tight schedules, conflicts with co-workers, and worries about job stability.

When workers are stressed for any combination of reasons, the effects can be insidious. Dr. Albert Ray, physician director of Patient Education and Health Promotion for Kaiser Permanente in southern California, points to common signs and symptoms of stress:

·         Acting angry and having a short temper

·         Dealing with others in a curt, inhospitable manner

·         Being present, but not fully productive

·         Transformation from a friendly team player to an introvert

·         Mocking the organization's strategies and visions

·         Physical symptoms, ranging from itchy skin to chest pain, fatigue, abdominal cramping, and ringing of the ears, among many others

·         Emotional problems like depression, anxiety, compulsive behavior, and substance abuse

And, of course, another symptom is carelessness. Workers may be too tense or worn out to pay attention and take proper precautions. That's when stress can lead to accidents and injuries.

 


Employers aren’t doing reform math

Source: https://www.benefitspro.com

By Denis Storey

For as cost-conscious as most employers are, a new study reveals more than half of them haven’t even worked out the math when it comes to how much health reform is going to cost them.

But among those who have started doing the math, the survey, just released from Willis Human Capital Practice, shows two-thirds of them have already seen compliance-based cost increases stemming from the reform law. And this makes for a strange dichotomy, since the experts at Willis insist employers are relying on some misguided perceptions as the plan for life after reform, which is why, they say, so many employers haven’t done anything yet.

In fact, the study shows that only 20 percent of employers expect to adjust their benefits plans as a result of increased compliance costs. But perhaps most damning—or embarrassing—is this revelation: “Consequently, the vast majority of employers still hope to comply with health care More than half of employers haven’t even worked out the math when it comes to healthcare reform.reform and expand their health coverage as necessary—without reducing other benefits,” lifted straight from the Willis press release.

“Employers are still coming to terms with the impact of health care reform, and many employers still seem to function in a ‘shock mode.’ While few employers consciously manage their group medical benefits as a component of their total rewards perspective, survey responses indicate the very beginning of an employer trend in this direction,” said Jay Kirschbaum, practice leader, national legal and research group, Willis Human Capital Practice.

 


Labor Department Releases New FMLA Model Forms and Notice Poster

Source: Jackson Lewis

The U.S. Department of Labor has released revised model Family and Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”) forms to administer federal FMLA leave and a notice poster. The updated forms should be used by employers immediately, although they include no substantive revisions despite recent rule-making on the FMLA military caregiver leave provisions (see our article DOL Publishes Final Regulations Addressing Military Family Leave Provisions). The new forms expire on February 28, 2015. Following are links to the revised model forms:

Employers should keep in mind that family and medical leave obligations under state/territorial laws may provide for a greater leave entitlement than the FMLA and (most notably in California, Connecticut and Washington, D.C.) require employers to provide other forms or information.

The DOL notice poster summarizes major provisions of the federal FMLA and tells employees how to file a complaint. By March 8, 2013, all covered employers must display the new notice poster in a conspicuous place where employees and applicants for employment can see it. The poster must be displayed at all locations even if there are no employees eligible for FMLA at the location (e.g., there are fewer than 50 employees employed within a 75-mile radius of the worksite). Electronic posting also is permitted to satisfy the posting requirement, as long as it otherwise meets the requirements of the regulations.

The poster may be accessed here: https://www.dol.gov/whd/regs/compliance/posters/fmlaen.pdf


Wellness Programs Can Reduce Worker Medical Costs by 18 Percent: Study

Source: https://www.workforce.com

By Sheena Harrison

Workplace wellness programs can reduce medical costs by more than 18 percent for the average worker, according to a report published by the American College of Occupational and Environmental Medicine.

The January edition of the Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, published by the Elk Grove Village, Illinois-based ACOEM, includes a study titled "Medical Care Savings From Workplace Wellness Programs: What Is a Realistic Savings Potential?"

The report said wellness programs could reduce costs for risks such as physical inactivity, smoking, high blood pressure and obesity. If the risk factors were lowered to "theoretical minimums," health care expenses could be lowered by an average of $650, or 18.4 percent, for all working adults, the study said.

Cost savings can reach up to 28 percent for aging employees and retirees who participate in wellness programs, according to the study.

"Medical care savings from workplace wellness programs will increase with time given that more eligible wellness program members participate, effective control of heightened risk factors improves, and greater risk reversal can be achieved," the report says.

 


"Healthiest Companies in America" Announced

Healthcare Costs Decline Among Top-Rated Companies as Employees Engage in Performance-Based Wellness Programs

Performance-based health programs deliver substantial results for companies and their employees

Source: https://www.prnewswire.com

CHICAGO, Feb. 23, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Interactive Health Solutions, Inc. (IHS) today announced their 2011 "Healthiest Companies in America."  Citing clinical and medical claim data from companies' performance-based employee health programs, IHS is presenting the awards for the fifth consecutive year.

The 70 honorees are corporations and organizations nationwide that have created a "culture of wellness," significantly reducing their healthcare costs through widespread employee participation in proactive health and wellness initiatives.  The selection process involved evaluating healthcare data for the companies with clinical information demonstrating improved employee health across an index of key indicators.

IHS utilizes comprehensive data-driven analysis to customize care based on the employee's unique personal risk factors.  Beginning with an initial health evaluation, IHS identifies individuals with health risks.  Upon review of the employee's personal risk factors, a team of qualified health professionals creates an outreach program designed to ensure each individual is on a pathway to health.

"We engage an employer's entire employee population throughout the year to help individuals get and stay healthy.  Our approach is highly personal in that we customize goals and a course of action, providing tools and support in a proactive way.  This is about staying healthy and possibly even saving lives, as well as containing costs," said Joseph A. O'Brien , President and CEO of IHS.

On average, employers offering the IHS performance-based program reduced their health care costs by 8.4 percent year over year, while 81 percent of enrolled employees achieved or exceeded wellness goals.  Market leaders in data-driven health and wellness programs for employee populations, IHS works with more than 1,400 employers with over one million employees.

"We've tracked over 36 million data points to deliver analysis and benchmarks against national norms and peer groups," said O'Brien.  "'Healthiest Companies in America' recognizes those companies that do an outstanding job encouraging employees to engage with these programs.  It's just one way to showcase this crucial component of containing healthcare costs nationally."

For more information on "Healthiest Companies in America," visit https://www.healthiestcompanies.com/