1 / 30

Open Enrollment Update

Public Employees Benefits Board February 18, 2003 DIS Forum Building Board Room 605 E. 11th Olympia, Washington. Open Enrollment Update. Reduced number of benefits fairs Minimal disruption for Aetna members 92% had access to their PCP through another managed care plan

Download Presentation

Open Enrollment Update

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Public Employees Benefits BoardFebruary 18, 2003DIS Forum BuildingBoard Room605 E. 11th Olympia, Washington

  2. Open Enrollment Update • Reduced number of benefits fairs • Minimal disruption for Aetna members • 92% had access to their PCP through another managed care plan • 94% had access to their specialty providers through another managed care plan • Increase in on-line enrollment!

  3. Open Enrollment TransactionsAll PEBB Members 20022003 Web Transactions 36.1% 52.5% Paper Transactions 63.9% 47.5%

  4. Open Enrollment Plan Changes

  5. WASHINGTON STATEPRESCRIPTION DRUG PROJECT

  6. Prescription Drug Project • Vision • All state agencies shall deliver the best value in prescription drugs • Mission • The purpose of the Prescription Drug Project (Phase II) is to develop and implement a program (using existing statutory authority) to optimize state resources related to prescription drug purchasing and pharmacy benefits management while optimizing the delivery of high-quality health care to our customers.

  7. Prescription Drug Project Objectives • Establish prescription drug project structure and execute interagency agreement for project governance and shared resources • Establish an evidence-based preferred drug list to be used initially by MAA and to serve as a guide for wider adoption by other agencies and joint procurement • Establish a statewide Pharmacy & Therapeutics Committee which may also serve as a statewide Drug Utilization Review Board • Consolidate prescription drug purchasing for multiple agencies by using the same vendor(s) (RFP released February 14, 2003)

  8. Prescription Drug Project Objectives • To improve the cost effectiveness of the state’s prescription drug purchases • 2003-05 savings from state funds • MAA $23.7 million • Labor & Industries $8.6 million • HCA $1 million • Cost to implement($1.6 million) • Net state savings $31.7 million

  9. Alternative Benefit Designs: High Cost-sharing Options

  10. Background and Assumptions: • Some legislators have expressed interest in alternative plan designs that reduce premiums. • The alternative plan designs include higher deductibles and cost-sharing but do not decrease covered benefits • The alternative could be offered in addition to (rather than in place of) plans with lower cost-sharing • The high cost-sharing design could be administered either as a self-insured plan through UMP, or by a contract with a commercial carrier (PPO) • The PEBB risk adjustment process would be used to mitigate adverse impacts of the potential shift of healthier enrollees

  11. Examples of Alternative Benefit Designs

  12. The Alternative Benefit Designs. . . • Reduce total premium costs by around $70 per month (employee only, CY2003 $$$) • Offer plan design alternatives that are becoming popular in other markets • Significantly increase enrollees’ financial risk in case of serious illness • Would require additional communications effort to help enrollees understand plan choices • May increase uncertainty for managed care plans

  13. February 18, 2003 Mercer National Survey of Employer-Sponsored Health Plans - 2002Presentation to PEBB Karin Swenson-Moore, FSA, MAAA Seattle Mercer Human Resource Consulting

  14. National Results Mercer Human Resource Consulting

  15. Total health benefit cost jumps 14.7% – biggest increase since 1990 + 14.0%* + 14.7% + 11.2% + 8.1% + 7.3% + 6.2% -2.9% *Average increase projected for 2003 Mercer Human Resource Consulting

  16. Total health benefit cost jumps 14.7% in 2002 • Health benefit cost rising 7 times the rate of general inflation • Competitor surveys: • Hewitt: 2002: 13.7% 2003: 15.4% • Towers: 2003: 15% • Kaiser: 2001/2002: 12.7% Mercer Human Resource Consulting

  17. Marked drop in HMO enrollment;PPOs gain PPO HMO POS plan Traditional Indemnity Percent of all covered employees Mercer Human Resource Consulting

  18. 2002 HMO cost increase impacted by large employer actions (>500 ees) Percent increase in cost, 2001 to 2002 Mercer Human Resource Consulting

  19. Overall, HMO cost trend keeping pace with PPO cost trend +15.0% + 15.3% +12.7% +7.7% + 12.2% +9.6% Mercer Human Resource Consulting

  20. Prescription drug cost trend continues to stabilize Based on employers with 500 or more employees Drug trend in largest medical plan at last renewal *Projected for next renewal Mercer Human Resource Consulting

  21. West Region Results Mercer Human Resource Consulting

  22. West region health benefit cost jumps 20.6% in 2002 + 20.6% + 5.9% + 8.9% + 8.5% -2.2% + 2.3% Mercer Human Resource Consulting

  23. 2002 West region results by planPercent increase in cost, 2001 to 2002 Mercer Human Resource Consulting

  24. HMO trends similar to PPO in West region +18.1% +7.6% + 17.9% +6.3% + 7.4% +12.5% Mercer Human Resource Consulting

  25. What are employers doing? Mercer Human Resource Consulting

  26. Large employers take action to lower HMO costs • Reduced the number of HMOs per location and total number offered • Added hospital deductibles • Increased office visit, ER co-pays • Large employer HMO trend held to 8.1%, while small employers averaged 25.9% increase Mercer Human Resource Consulting

  27. Network disruptions erode employee loyalty to plans • 27% of all employers have experienced network disruption due to dropped contracts, M&A, or plan failures within past 2 years • Those employers report that over half (54%) of their employees were affected Mercer Human Resource Consulting

  28. For 2002 For 2003 Large employers more likelyto raise contributions and cost sharing in 2003 Will increase employee contribution percentage next year Small employers 18% 24% Large employers 40% 49% Will increase cost-sharing* next year Small employers 15% 19% Large employers 34% 44% *by raising deductibles, copays/coinsurance, or out-of-pocket maximums Mercer Human Resource Consulting

  29. What employers can do to manage cost • Cost shifting to employees • manage short-term increases • increase premium contributions • increase benefit cost sharing • Consumer-directed health plans • manage long-term trend • consumerism spectrum goes from education about health care and costs to giving employees health care accounts • Health improvement programs Mercer Human Resource Consulting

  30. Miscellaneous State Employee Program Purchasing Update -- 2004

More Related