Chapter Outline - University of Rhode Island

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Transcript Chapter Outline - University of Rhode Island

Employee Benefits: Overview and Group Medical Coverage  Overview of employ benefits  Group medical insurance  Background of health care market  Moral hazard problem  Traditional fee for service plan  Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs)  Provisions in Group Medical Plans  Health Care Cost Inflation

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Major Types of Employee Benefits  Medical insurance  Retirement plan  Life insurance  Short term disability insurance  Long term disability insurance  other insurance such as dental, vision insurance

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Major Types of Employee Benefits

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Who Pays the Cost of Benefits?

 In the long run, employees pay the cost  contributory plans - directly  noncontributory plans – indirectly  In short run, employer profitability is likely to decrease if benefit costs increase

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Background on Health Care Market  Three major players  Health care providers  Physicians, nurses and hospitals  Employees/individuals who seek health care  Employers / Insurers who provide insurance

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Moral Hazard Problems  Providers often can influence demand  Providers better informed  Consumers do not pay marginal cost due to insurance  Two types of moral hazard  Ex ante  Ex post

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Major Types of Group Medical Insurance  Traditional fee-for-service  HMO  PPO

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Traditional fee-for-service plans  Employer provides coverage  With deductibles and coinsurance  Employer either self insures or purchases insurance from  Insurers  Blue Cross/Blue Shield organizations  Employees choose service provider  Provider charges fee to employee or insurer

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Classification of Fee-for-service Plan  Basic health care benefits  Hospital expense  Surgical expense  Medical expense  Major medical insurance  Comprehensive medical insurance

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Provisions of Fee-for-service Plan  Deductible  Coinsurance  Stop loss limit  Maximum limit

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Excessive Utilization and Fee-for Service  Fee-for-service plans aggravate excessive utilization problem b/c of the separation of  Provision of insurance  Provision of care  Reducing excessive utilization  Increase deductibles and coinsurance  Managed care  insurer monitor use  limit choice in service providers

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Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs)  HMO is a type of managed care plan that provides health care services to its members through a network of doctors, hospitals, and health care providers.  How HMOs control cost   involve contracts with physicians whose compensation depends on utilization Employees’ choice of providers is restricted  HMOs charge employers a fixed annual fee  Primary care physician

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HMO Backlash  Critics:  HMOs have too little incentives for quality care  Factors limiting problem  too little care can lead to greater costs later  malpractice claims  competition

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Preferred Provider Organizations (PPO)  Another approach to containing costs in group health insurance  Difference from HMO  Give employees and their dependents a broad choice of providers  If the insured goes to a preferred provider, PPOs waive most deductibles and coinsurance

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Provisions in Group Medical Plans  Dependent coverage  usually requires an additional employee contribution  Premiums within a plan usually vary less than expected claim costs vary  cross-subsidies  group plans can still be beneficial to low risk  Mandated benefits  e.g., mental health services

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Provisions in Group Medical Plans  Portability  Pre-existing conditions clauses   why? - reduce adverse selection problems:  discourages job changes  exposes those who switch jobs to less coverage  COBRA  1996 legislation   can still have pre-existing conditions clause for 12 months but coverage under a prior employer’s plan counts

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Provisions in Group Medical Plans  Renewability  Individual coverage typically is guaranteed renewable  ==> those who learn about illnesses continue to get insurance on the same terms as those who don’t  Group coverage typically is not guaranteed renewable  Why the difference?

  Switching costs higher for individuals ==> less likely to get those with good experience switching insurers

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Health Care Cost Inflation  Health care costs increased substantially during the 1980s and early 1990s

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Why Have Health Care Costs Increased?

 Excessive utilization  Increased demand for quality care  Technological advances  Increased proportion of elderly people  Other factors  Uninsured people obtain care via expensive means  Increased number of malpractice suits  defensive medicine

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