The Cadillac Tax: Myths & Facts

Original post benefitspro.com

Americans love a good story. From fairy tales to hair-raising films that leave us cowering in our seats, we enjoy when our hearts pound in anticipation. Sometimes, though, we keep ourselves up at night by creating myths about things that shouldn't be worrisome at all. One example: The Affordable Care Act's 40 percent excise tax on high-cost health care plans, commonly referred to as the Cadillac Tax.

Although we are several years away from its implementation, brokers are wondering what these health care changes will mean for their business. The Cadillac Tax is confusing and prompts questions from employers and benefits professionals — especially about when to make changes to benefits plans and whether voluntary insurance is affected.

Let's take some time to distinguish between the myths and facts so when you communicate with your clients about their plans this year — and in years to come — you have the facts to ensure you’re providing clients with accurate information to make effective business decisions regarding benefit offerings.

 

Myth: Employers should make benefit changes now to avoid the Cadillac tax.
Fact: The Cadillac tax has been delayed until 2020.

  • As part of the Congressional spending bill signed into law in late December 2015, the Cadillac Tax is delayed until 2020.
  • Considering implementation of the tax is several years away and regulations will evolve, employers can wait before considering changes to their policies.

 

Myth: All voluntary benefits are included in the tax.
Fact: Generally, voluntary insurance products do not count toward the Cadillac Tax calculation.

  • Only two types of voluntary coverage — specified disease and hospital indemnity — are subject to the calculation of the tax, but only if they’re paid for with pretax dollars, such as through a cafeteria plan, or with excludable employer contributions. Otherwise, they are not subject to the calculation of the tax.
  • Voluntary insurance products are defined as HIPAA-excepted benefits.

 

Myth: Employers should switch their pretax voluntary insurance products to after-tax versions.
Fact: Only employers with benefits plans considered “high cost” need to consider after-tax strategies.

  • Employers and their workers receive tax advantages for retaining pretax voluntary products.
  • Only two types of voluntary coverage — specified disease and hospital indemnity — are included in tax calculations, and only then if they’re paid with pretax dollars or the employer pays any portion of the premium. Other voluntary insurance benefits won't trigger the Cadillac Tax, regardless of whether they’re offered before or after tax.

 

Myth: Employers or workers will be responsible for paying the Cadillac Tax when it goes into effect.
Fact: In most cases, the insurance provider will be responsible for paying the tax.

  • Most small businesses are fully insured, meaning the insurance provider sets the premium and pays the claims. When that's the case, the insurer, not the employer, is responsible for paying the Cadillac Tax when it goes into effect in 2020.
  • If an employer is self-insured, meaning the employer sets the premiums and pays the claims, or the coverage offered is a health savings account (HSA) or an Archer medical savings account (MSA), the employer or the plan administrator will be responsible for paying the tax.

The bottom line is that myths and rumors have made the Cadillac Tax seem more confusing than it already is. It isn't even expected to take effect for another four years, so it shouldn't prompt your clients to exclude voluntary insurance from their benefits options. After all, the security voluntary coverage provides can help ensure your clients and their employees sleep well instead of worrying about medical costs that are continuing to rise.


Trending: Virtual Healthcare Gains Broader Acceptance

Original post benefitsnews.com

The Cadillac tax may have been postponed until 2020 but that doesn’t mean employers have put healthcare cost containment measures on the backburner. In fact, new research shows 90% of employers are planning myriad measures to control rising healthcare costs.

The 2016 Medical Plan Trends and Observations Report, released today by DirectPath and CEB, highlights top trends in employers’ 2016 healthcare strategies. Overwhelmingly, employers are continuing to shift a larger share of healthcare costs to employees, often through high-deductible health plans, according to the report.

The use of telemedicine, meanwhile, continues to grow, with almost two-thirds of organizations offering or planning to offer such a service by 2018 – a 50% increase from the previous year.

“Employees often say that they go to the emergency room because it's hard to get a doctor's appointment. With telemedicine, you've got 24/7 access and you don't necessarily need an appointment,” notes Kim Buckey, vice president of compliance communications at DirectPath. “That's certainly a huge driver of avoiding those visits to the emergency room or even the urgent care clinic because telemedicine is typically less expensive than an urgent care visit, as well.”

Buckey says it “makes sense” for employers to investigate telemedicine – the remote diagnosis and treatment of patients via phone calls, email and/or video chat – because employees are increasingly accepting of virtual access to just about everything.

“How many employees now are just grabbing their phones, iPads, or computers when they need information? That's something that people are comfortable with using and they don't have to leave their house to get quality care,” she says.

Spousal and tobacco surcharges are also expected to grow, according to the CEB data. Twelve percent of employers surveyed already have spousal surcharges in place, while 29% expect to introduce them in the next three years. Twenty-one percent of employers already have tobacco surcharges in place, while 26% expect to implement them in the next three years.

“I think we're going to see more and more of those, particularly as employers focus more on wellness initiatives,” says Buckey, adding that a robust communications plan is needed before implementing tobacco or spousal surcharges.

“People don't understand basic concepts like deductibles, co-pays, co-insurance, let alone how to make a decision about what plan to choose, or frankly, what's the best way of receiving care,” she says. “As more and more of these provisions are added to plans, they have the potential of being even more confusing and off-putting to employees, so having a robust communications plan in place that addresses all of these issues [is important]. ... There certainly will be cases where these surcharges aren't going to apply to a large percentage of the population. You just want to make sure that the folks who are affected, understand how they're affected and why.”


Pay attention to Medicare Part D Coverage and 5 other things you should know during open enrollment

Once a year Medicare beneficiaries get the chance once a year to make a change. Open enrollment runs from Oct. 15 through Dec. 7.

Medicare beneficiaries can choose from original Medicare which is provided by the government or Medicare Advantage which is offered by private health insurance companies.

Beneficiaries can also change their Part D plans which provides prescription drug coverage.

Maryalene LaPonsie with U.S. News and World Report highlights 6 things you should know during the open enrollment period.

Part B Premiums May Be Increasing for Some People

A report this month in the AARP Bulletin, based on data from the Medicare Boards of Trustees, finds 1 in 7 Medicare beneficiaries could see their Part B premiums increase as much as 52 percent next year.

The increase will go into effect if there is no cost-of-living adjustment for Social Security in 2016, but it will apply mainly to those already paying higher premiums because of their income and affect those who pay premiums directly to the government. Most people making direct payments are doing so because they are delaying Social Security benefits, a strategy that can increase their future monthly payments.

“Should folks in the latter situation sign up for Social Security now?” asks Patricia Barry, a features editor for AARP Publications who wrote the AARP report and author of "Medicare For Dummies.” Under the law, those who have their Part B premiums deducted from Social Security cannot be subject to a premium increase.

Barry says applying for Social Security in October may allow people to save money on premiums in the short run but could cost them more in the future. “They might be giving up higher [Social Security] payments for the rest of their lives for the sake of what could well turn out to be just one year of inflated Part B premiums.”

Pay Special Attention to Your Part D Coverage

Although it’s a smart idea to review your health insurance options each open enrollment period, experts say most plans stay largely the same each year. Instead, most people will find changes in Part D plans.

“It’s something [consumers] want to check into every single year,” says Kristin Romel, a health and life agent with Alpine North Insurance Agency in Alpena, Michigan.

Romel explains that many companies use a claims-based system for determining prescription drug costs and coverage. A medication for which they had a large number of claims may end up moving into a tier with higher copays. However, other insurers may not have had the same number of claims for those drugs, and the out-of-pocket costs for those prescriptions might remain lower in other plans.

Barry’s research supports this finding. In the last few years, she has analyzed what different Part D plans in the same state charge as copays for the same drug. “Those copays vary enormously, often by more than $100 for a 30-day supply, and sometimes by a lot more,” she says.

The Network May Be More Important Than the Price

Those shopping for a Medicare Advantage plan may gravitate toward the option with the lowest premium. However, there is more than price to consider.

“Patients should be scrutinizing the providers [in a plan’s network],” says Colin LeClair, senior vice president of business and product development for ConcertoHealth, a health care provider for dual-eligible Medicare and Medicaid patients. “The quality of providers is far more important than cost.”

While it may hard to gauge the quality of unknown physicians, Medicare beneficiaries should at least check a plan’s network to see if their preferred doctors and facilities participate. “You’ve got to be careful with little, fly-by-night companies,” Romel says. “Are hospitals actually going to take that insurance?”

Your Mailbox Is Full, but the Best Help May be Found Elsewhere

Barry has a simple piece of advice when it comes to all those brochures you’ve received: “Ignore that avalanche of mailings from Medicare plans that are coming through the door.”

Instead, use the plan finder at Medicare.gov to look over your options. Your State Health Insurance Assistance Program may also be able to help you navigate your choices. LeClair says he finds a lot of his company’s clients bring their stack of mailings to the doctor’s office.

“Physicians should not be advising patients on which plan to use,” LeClair says, “but they can help [patients] understand them.”

65-Year-Olds Need to Enroll Even If They Delay Social Security

Open enrollment is only for those who are already enrolled in Medicare, but John Piershale, a certified financial planner and wealth advisor with Piershale Financial Group in Crystal Lake, Illinois, says now is a good time to remind 65-year-olds that they need to enroll in Medicare, or they will face penalties.

For those filing for Social Security by age 65, enrollment in Medicare is typically automatic. However, those waiting to claim Social Security until a later age will need to be proactive about enrolling. The initial enrollment period runs for seven months and includes the three months before your birthday month, your birthday month and the three months after it.

Failing to enroll in Medicare during this period results in a 10 percent increase in Part B premiums for every year you delay enrolling. “A lot of people don’t know about [the penalty], and there is no way to fix it,” Piershale says.

The Biggest Change to Medicare Is One You Can't See

One of the biggest changes coming to Medicare is one that won’t be immediately obvious to patients, LeClair says. Many insurance companies are moving toward outcome-based contracts with providers, which could change how patients are seen by doctors. These contracts are intended to reward physicians who are, for example, successfully managing chronic conditions and reducing hospital admissions.

“Historically, [insurers] paid physicians on a fee-for-service model,” LeClair says. That system encouraged physicians to move through patients quickly and possibly order unnecessary testing and other services. “Now you have providers focused on doing less and providing better outcomes,” LeClair says.

From a patient perspective, an emphasis on positive outcomes may mean shorter wait times to get in to see a doctor and more time spent with a physician once you’re in the office.

Until outcome-based care becomes standard, Medicare beneficiaries can use the annual open enrollment period to switch to a new plan with different providers if they are unhappy with their options. However, to make the most of the opportunity, you’ll need to compare more than just the price. “Don’t go cheap on your health insurance,” Romel advises. “Don’t put a price tag on your health.”


What do the ICD-10 codes mean for health providers, employers and HR managers?

After two years of delays, the new ICD-10 codes are live in hospitals across the country.

The tends of thousands of new government-mandated codes describe diseases and hospital procedures in the billing process. The codes are aimed to cover everything that medical professionals may be called on to treat.

Read more codes via @EveryICD10 on Twitter.

How do these codes affect health insurance companies, employers and their human resource departments. Forbes.com contributor Bruce Japsen covers that part of the story.

From erroneous medical bills to denied health services, Americans may need patience grappling with insurance claims beginning today, the much-anticipated launch of tens of thousands of new government-mandated “ICD-10” codes used to describe diseases and hospital procedures in the billing process.

At least one analysis says one in four of the nation’s doctor practices aren’t ready for the transition to  International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision, known as “ICD-10.” After two years of delays, medical care providers have to be ready for the conversion to 140,000 new codes that they will use in order to bill government and private insurers.

Health insurance companies, employers and their human resources departments have been working with patients and health plan enrollees, warning of potential problems. Aon Hewitt (AON ), a large employee benefits consultancy, says there is potential for doctors and hospitals to use outdated codes and potentially bill patients for services that could be covered.

“This is a complex conversion that could initially lead to disruptions across the medical field,” said Chris Miles, senior vice president of Aon Hewitt’s health group. “Providers may see overall delays in claims processing, and some individuals may have insurance claims that are denied for services that were provided, but not properly coded.”

The conversion is being required by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to provide more specificity to the existing coding system. The outgoing ICD-9 codes have limited information about medical conditions and hospital procedures while the new ICD-10 code “sets provide flexibility to accommodate future healthcare needs, facilitating timely electronic processing of claims by reducing requests for additional information to providers,” the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has told doctors.

“The impact of the ICD-10 switchover on the healthcare system will not be fully understood until after claims processing begins on Oct. 1,” American Medical Association president Dr. Steven Stack said earlier this week.

But physician groups admit there could be challenged based on surveys they’ve conducted of their colleagues.

Medical Group Management Association president and chief executive Dr. Halee Fischer-Wright said a recent “survey showed 20% or more of physician practices have not received the billing system updates necessary for ICD-10.”

“This could significantly disrupt the submission of patient claims,” Fischer-Wright added.

ICD-10 conversion has been a massive undertaking for private insurers as well since they will use the codes in their claims processing and paying doctors and other providers of medical care.  It has added significant capital expenses to health insurance companies, impacting the likes of Anthem WLP +% (ANTM), Aetna AET -0.93% (AET), Cigna CI -0.75% (CI), Humana HUM +0.06% (HUM) and UnitedHealth Group UNH -1.75% (UNH).

Benefits experts say health plan enrollees could see a delay in authorization for certain tests and procedures if doctors aren’t adequately coding the services. Insurance claims also could be denied.

But the shift to new codes is a good thing overall, particularly as doctors and hospitals move away from fee-for-service medicine to a healthcare system that pays providers based on outcomes and quality.

“Transferring to the new medical claim codes will allow key industry stakeholders to better track and manage diseases, measure the quality of care and evaluate patient outcomes—all of which support the shift toward value-based payment plans,” Miles said.


10 things to check when planning 2016 health benefit packages

The clock is ticking down to 2016 which means time is running out to dot the 'i' and cross the 't' for your health benefit packages. Employee Benefit Adviser has these tips.

1) Employer shared-responsibility (ESR) strategy: Ensure the intended goal of avoiding or paying ESR assessments for 2016 coverage is supported by coverage offers, administrative and recordkeeping processes, and benefit documents.

2) ESR reporting: Arrange data sources, systems and administrative processes to collect all information about enrollees with minimum essential coverage (MEC), full-time employees, and coverage offers needed for reporting on 2016 coverage. Create a process for correcting any erroneous IRS filings and personal statements.

3) Preventative care: Ensure “non-grandfathered” group health plans comply with the final ACA rules and recent guidance on cost-free preventive services.

4) Other ACA reporting and disclosure requirements: Review delivery operations for summaries of benefits and coverage (SBCs) and watch for revised SBC templates. Prepare for round two of online submission and payment of ACA’s reinsurance fee.

5) Mid-year changes to cafeteria plan elections: Decide whether to permit mid-year changes to cafeteria plan elections for either or both of the status-change events in IRS Notice 2014-55.

6) ACA’s out-of-pocket maximum: Verify that self-only and other (e.g., family) coverage tiers in “non-grandfathered” plans meet ACA’s 2016 out-of-pocket (OOP) limits for in-network care. Confirm that family coverage also satisfies ACA’s self-only OOP limit for each enrollee.

7) Same-sex marriages and domestic partnerships: Assess how the U.S. Supreme Court’s Obergefell v. Hodges ruling that legalizes same-sex marriage nationwide affects your benefit programs and employment policies. Also, consider the decision’s indirect implications for domestic partner coverage.

8) Mental health parity: Check that plan designs and operations provide parity between medical/surgical and mental health/substance use disorder (MH/SUD) coverage. Federal audits of health plans now evaluate compliance with the final Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA) rules that took effect in 2015. In addition, state legislative activity and litigation around parity issues continue.

9) Wellness: Review employee wellness programs against the proposed Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) rules requiring voluntary participation and restricting incentives for completing health risk assessments and/or biomedical screenings. Be prepared to make changes after EEOC finalizes these rules for nondiscriminatory wellness plans under the Americans with Disabilities Act.

10) Fixed-indemnity and supplemental health insurance: Review fixed-indemnity and supplemental health insurance policies to ensure they qualify as excepted benefits under the ACA and the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA).


Benefit offerings impacted by millennials

Originally posted by Mike Nesper on August 31, 2015 on benefitnews.com.

Generation Y surpassed Generation X this year, to become the largest population of employees in the workforce — more than one in three U.S. workers are between the ages of 18 and 34, according the Pew Research Center. And those 53.5 million millennials are influencing the benefits employers are offering.

Millennials want more customization, says Meredith Ryan-Reid, senior vice president of MetLife’s group, voluntary and worksite benefits. Employers feel the same: 54% rated benefits customization as extremely important, according to MetLife’s 13th annual employee benefits trends study.

Millennials like variety, so employers should offer a broad range of benefits, says Joe Ellis, senior vice president of CBIZ Benefits and Insurance Services. The same isn’t true for networks. Millennials aren’t particularly concerned with narrow networks — they go to whoever is included, Ellis says.

That’s a good thing, especially as more employers are reducing network accessibility as a way to cut costs. This year, 11% of employers introduced narrow network plans as a cost containment tactic, a 7% increase from 2014, according to the Arthur J. Gallagher & Co. recent benefits strategy and benchmarking survey. Cost-sharing and changing carriers were the most frequently used strategies for controlling health care costs.

Both methods have a limited shelf life. Only a certain amount can be pushed onto employees, and recent mergers have reduced the list of major U.S. health insurance companies to just three, says Bill Ziebell, executive vice president of Gallagher Benefit Services.

Employers are also using online enrollment, telemedicine and mandatory specialty pharmacy programs to rein in costs — but premiums are still rising. Six in 10 employers reported increases of 4% or more during their most recent renewal, Gallagher found, and 23% of respondents saw double-digit increases.

Many employers are focused on medical renewals and others are hampered by Affordable Care Act regulations, Ziebell says. “It’s hard to be strategic,” he says, and that’s exactly the help advisers need to give their clients. Advisers and their employer clients should take an all-inclusive look at benefits and have a plan for several years into the future, Ziebell says.

Millennials impacted by the recession

The recession had a big impact on millennials, who entered the job market at a tough time, and many aren’t relying on government safety nets being in place later in life, Ryan-Reid says. In fact, nearly one-quarter of Americans expect no Social Security benefits, a Bankrate.com survey found.

That has spurred millennials to take a greater interest in employer offerings. “They’re craving information,” Ryan-Reid says. However, some employers aren’t delivering.

Just 38.4% of millennials strongly agree that their company is effectively educating them about their benefits, the MetLife study found. When presented with the statement, “I am confident I made the right decisions at my last annual enrollment,” less than half of millennials, 48.5%, strongly agreed, compared to 54% of Gen X employees and 62% of baby boomers.

Access to information that’s easy to understand increases confidence among all generations, MetLife found. For millennails, they prefer education via their provider’s website, a benefits handbook and in-person meetings. “In general, most people prefer to talk to someone,” Ryan-Reid says.


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.

Identity-theft protection benefits boost business, satisfaction

Originally posted January 20, 2015 by Melissa A. Winn on www.ebn.benefitnews.com.

With employee news feeds brimming with headlines about recent computer hacks and data leaks, employers are showing a growing interest in offering identity theft protection services as a benefit to their worried workforce. Benefit industry experts say the relatively inexpensive voluntary benefit is not only highly-appreciated by employees, but it can also act as a differentiator in a benefit adviser’s sales portfolio.

Employer concern about employee identity theft has been on the uptick recently, says Nick Park, voluntary benefits specialist at Corporate Synergies. “It has definitely been a topic of conversation more in the last year,” he says.

Identity theft fraud claims a new victim every two seconds, according to the 2014 Identity Fraud Report issued by financial research firm Javelin Strategy and Research. The Bureau of Justice Statistics, the government research agency for the Justice Department, found that 16.6 million American adults experienced identity theft in 2012 alone.

“In a group of 10 people there’s always at least one or two people who have a personal experience with an identity theft situation in some form or fashion,” says Kelly Fristoe, president and CEO of Financial Partners in Wichita Falls.

Fristoe sells the identity theft product LifeLock, which can be sold to individuals or offered to groups as a value added voluntary or employer paid product.

“[T]here are agents I know that do sell a ton of it,” he says. “Theirs and my experience is that it is a high-value product.”

While some employers choose to add identity theft protection services as a new benefit offering in their voluntary benefit package during annual open enrollment, Park says employers have also approached his firm for information on the benefit throughout the year, particularly if somebody in the organization suffers from an identity theft.

“They don’t want that to happen to any other employee in their organization,” he says.

Employees rely on their employer for “a host of financial needs: planning for retirement, protecting against the costs of health care, or even accidents and illness; not to mention, their paycheck. Identity theft can represent a threat to all aspects of financial security and is right in line with benefits [employer clients] can offer their employees,” according to identity theft protection services provider LifeLock.

Employee satisfaction

“It is a ‘nice to have’ benefit,” says Park. “I don’t know if it would be considered a necessity at this point, but employees like it.”

The monthly premiums are usually pretty affordable, he says and the benefit “typically has very little dissatisfaction once you have placed it in the employee population,” says Park. “It’s not something I hear negative feedback on ever.”

For benefit advisers, identity theft protection can be a good differentiating benefit offering, and “is a simple tool to give your clients satisfaction.”

With some insurance products there is a risk, he says, but not so much with identity theft protection.

“Sometimes, when you introduce a product to an employee population it may be complex or confusing and people don’t understand it, they don’t understand the coverage type. [Identity theft protection] is something everybody understands,” says Park.


Technology plays growing role in benefits

Originally posted January 27, 2015 by Mike Nesper on www.ebn.benefitnews.com.

Employers of all sizes are increasingly shifting toward using technology for enrolling in and managing their employee benefits. The market for technology-based platforms has been “growing leaps and bounds over past the five-plus years,” says Mark Rieder, an Austin-based senior vice president at NFP.

Ten to 15 years ago, he says, only large groups were focused on technology. Today, “they’re all very much interested in becoming more efficient,” Rieder says. “Technology has become affordable enough to [deploy] regardless of size.”

Offering a variety of support tools is important to help employees make the best selections, Rieder says. Employees want to be able to compare the cost of a procedure at various providers, he says. “Transparency tools are becoming more and more of a hot topic,” Rieder says. “Folks want to know what they’re buying.”

Employees also want to manage all of their needs — payroll, HR, benefits — in one location, Rieder says. The goal is to have a useful platform when it’s needed but not be in the employee’s face when they don’t, says Michael Askin, senior consultant with Mind Over Machines, a Maryland-based software development technology company.

The fact that many employers are still using paper isn’t necessarily a bad thing, Askin says. “There are lessons to be learned from other industries,” he says. Perhaps more importantly, paper protects employee information from hackers, Askin says. Ultimately, the goal of a technology-based platform is to increase employee engagement without increasing security exposure, he says.

A common misconception about security breaches is where the vulnerability lies, Askin says. “Most security issues are actually internal,” he says. For consumers, Askin recommends having a credit card for Internet-only purchases.


ACA lawsuit could have implications beyond health care

Originally posted by Mike Nesper on November 24, 2014 on BenefitNews.com.

Employers should continue preparations to comply with the Affordable Care Act despite House Republicans’ recent lawsuit against President Obama. The lawsuit, announced Friday, challenges the lawfulness of subsidies for lower-income individuals and Obama’s postponement of the employer mandate.

The lawsuit won’t have any short-term effects on the ACA, says Benefit Advisors Network Executive Director Perry Braun. “I would recommend not delaying any implementation plans and to move forward,” he says.

The Supreme Court is expected to rule on ACA subsidies in June — the high court agreed Nov. 7 to hear an appeal by four Virginians who are attempting to block those tax credits in 36 states. “Depending on the ruling and subsequent appeals, it could take until summer for this to be resolved,” Braun says.

The government will pay $175 billion to insurance companies over the next 10 years to help individuals who earn a yearly salary between $11,670 and $29,175 pay for health insurance. “If the lawsuit is successful, poor people would not lose their health care, because the insurance companies would still be required to provide coverage — but without the help of the government subsidy, the companies might be forced to raise costs elsewhere,” according to a Friday New York Times article.

The latest ACA-related lawsuit could have impacts beyond health care, Braun says. “The lawsuit is part of a potentially larger story, which is to have the judicial branch confirm what authority the president of United States has in changing or amending laws and what is the role of Congress,” he says. “The separation of powers is, in my opinion, the story here.”

It’s likely attempts to alter the health care law won’t be limited to the court room. In less than six weeks, Republicans will control both houses of Congress and top broker organizations expect another vote to repeal the ACA, however, they say, it’s more of a symbolic gesture than anything else. (So far, there have been 54 votes to either repeal or change the ACA).

Alden Bianchi, practice group leader of Mintz Levin’s employee benefits and executive compensation practice, says last week’s lawsuit is along the same line.There is no substance here,” he says. “This is, as best I can tell, political. I would guess that the intention is to keep the ACA alive as a campaign issue going into 2016.”