260 likes | 386 Views
Divisions of General Pediatrics and General Internal Medicine, & Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy, University of Michigan. Insurance Coverage of Vaccines. Matthew M. Davis, MD, MAPP Assistant Professor Pediatrics and Communicable Diseases, Internal Medicine, and Public Policy;
E N D
Divisions of General Pediatrics and General Internal Medicine, & Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy, University of Michigan Insurance Coverage of Vaccines Matthew M. Davis, MD, MAPP Assistant Professor Pediatrics and Communicable Diseases, Internal Medicine, and Public Policy; Child Health Evaluation and Research (CHEAR) Unit, University of Michigan
Challenges for Insurance Coverage of Vaccines • Scope • Who and how many children are potentially affected? • Why insurance coverage ≠ vaccine coverage • Public programs • Private insurance plans • Opportunities to address the challenges • What more do we need to know?
When Insurance and Vaccines Weren’t Linked … Polio vaccination drive in a school gym, Kansas, 1950s (courtesy of Bentley Historical Library)
When Insurance and Vaccines Weren’t Linked … Single vaccine efforts Infancy of private health insurance plans Little or no public insurance coverage Polio vaccination drive in a school gym, Kansas, 1950s (courtesy of Bentley Historical Library)
… To Linking Insurance and Vaccine Receipt Multiple vaccines Employer-sponsored plans as dominant source of health insurance for children National public insurance programs for children (Medicaid and SCHIP)
What insurance coverage do children have? Kaiser Family Foundation, 2004
Public-Sector Vaccine Financing • Federal funds • Vaccines for Children Program • Covers vaccine purchase for: • Uninsured • Medicaid • Native American / Alaska Native • Underinsured, in federally qualified or rural health centers • Section 317 • Vaccine purchase and system infrastructure • State funds • Vaccine purchase and system infrastructure
Challenges to Public Insurance and Vaccines • Patient access to Medicaid/VFC providers • Worse with states’ frozen and/or decreasing reimbursement to providers • Funding for public-sector vaccine purchase in face of rising vaccine costs • Increasing numbers of vaccines • Comparatively higher costs of newer vaccines • Timing of new recommendations vis-à-vis government budget cycles
Underinsurance in Private Health Plans • Definition: Child has insurance coverage, but benefits do not include coverage for all recommended vaccines • Estimated to affect >10% of child enrollees in private plans (Institute of Medicine, 2004) • Approximately 5 million children • Known to promote fragmentation of care (Davis et al, Pediatrics 2003)
Etiologies of Underinsurance in Private Plans • Trends in benefits and plan design • Regulatory factors • Employers’ benefit decision-making • Role of employees (proxies for children)
Trends in Therapeutic versus Preventive Benefits • Traditional emphasis on coverage of therapeutic benefits • Role of managed care • Initially higher likelihood of coverage for preventive services • With managed care backlash return to plans with fewer restrictions and more emphasis on catastrophic coverage • Failure to control rises in health care costs • Implementation of preventive care caps that limit coverage for vaccines
New Trend: “Consumer-Driven” Health Plans • High-deductible (≥$1000) health plans • “Give people the chance to say ‘no’ to themselves” • Health savings accounts (HSAs) • Increasing enrollment • Unclear implications for vaccinations
Regulatory Factors • Legislative mandates for children’s vaccines • VFC provision for underinsured children
Limits of State Vaccine Coverage Mandates • “Self-insured” health plans • Employer (typically >500 employees) bears financial risk • >50% of US employees enrolled in such plans • Number of children enrolled not known • Catastrophic > preventive coverage • Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA, 1974) • Federal statute • Self-insured plans exempt from state insurance mandates
Provisions for the Underinsured under VFC • VFC • Must receive vaccines at rural or federally qualified health centers • Fragmentation of care • Challenging to verify underinsurance • State-specific extensions of VFC • Depend on private provider participation • Challenging to verify underinsurance • Employer awareness of VFC provisions • Employers not encouraged to cover more recent vaccines if employees don’t complain about fragmented care
Benefit Decisions of Self-Insuring Employers • Inadequate information about short-term return on investment for newly recommended vaccines • Costs more evident than benefits • New vaccine recommendations contrast with other benefit considerations that are more expensive • Vaccines may be crowded off employers’ agenda • Essential to benefits design: employees’ preferences • What are employees’ demands about children’s vaccines?
Addressing Challenges: Insurance and Vaccines • Parents’ demand for childhood vaccine coverage • Employers’ “buy-in” for newly recommended vaccines • Effects of current trends in health plan benefit design
Parents’ Demand for Childhood Vaccines • “Carrots” • Information campaigns about the benefits of new vaccines, targeting parents • Will parents communicate demands for broader coverage in private plans to employers and insurers? • If coverage not available, will parents seek public-sector vaccines or pay out-of-pocket? • “Sticks” • Daycare and school entry requirements • Could requirements be implemented more broadly and more rapidly after new recommendations? • Potentially hindered by vaccine shortages
Employers’ “Buy-in” for Childhood Vaccines • Acknowledge and target employers’ economic interests • What are empiric data about productivity and absenteeism related to childhood vaccine coverage? • What are employers’ incentives to design benefit plans that prioritize prevention for children? • Communicate with employers as a unique and influential constituency • Distinct from parents and providers • Influenced by consultants • Can the case be made for the importance and urgency of coverage for newly recommended vaccines?
Effects of Current Health Plan Design Trends • Consumer-directed health plans • What are immunization rates for children enrolled in high-deductible health plans? • Do parents with high-deductible plans seek public-sector vaccines rather than pay out of pocket, or forgo newer vaccines altogether? • What are opportunities to encourage preventive care utilization in high-deductible plans? • Preventive care caps • Within a family, whose preventive care gets priority – the parent who needs a mammogram or the adolescent who is eligible for newly recommended vaccines (meningococcal conjugate, Tdap, HPV)?
Conclusions • Insurance coverage likely an influential factor in undervaccination for US children • Uninsured and publicly insured – limited access to care and to VFC providers in context of constrained public funds • Privately underinsured – benefit coverage not in step with latest recommendations • Opportunities to address underinsurance • Parents – employees • Employers’ decision-making • Effects of plan benefits and payment designs
Employees’ Preferences for Vaccine Coverage • National sample of adults (potential employees) • Offered hypothetical scenario of plans that differed only in vaccine coverage • $3 more per month to assure coverage of any newly recommended vaccine(s) in the next year Davis and Fant, 2005
Employees’ Preferences for Vaccine Coverage • National sample of adults (potential employees) • Offered hypothetical scenario of plans that differed only in vaccine coverage • $3 more per month to assure coverage of any newly recommended vaccine(s) in the next year • 79% of parents with children in household said they were willing to bear higher premiums to assure coverage of new vaccines Davis and Fant, 2005
Employees’ Preferences for Vaccine Coverage • National sample of adults (potential employees) • Offered hypothetical scenario of plans that differed only in vaccine coverage • $3 more per month to assure coverage of any newly recommended vaccine(s) in the next year • 79% of parents with children in household said they were willing to bear higher premiums to assure coverage of new vaccines • Are such plans feasible? • Will employees indicate they want coverage like this? Davis and Fant, 2005