Workplace Wellness Programs and Regulatory Requirements

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Workplace Wellness Programs and Regulatory Requirements Alliance for Health Reform Briefing June 22, 2015 Karen Pollitz, Senior Fellow Kaiser Family foundation Among Firms Offering Health Benefits, Percentage Offering a Particular Wellness Program to Their Employees, by Firm Size, 2014 Offer at Least One Specified Wellness Program* 73% 98% Class in Nutrition/Healthy Living* Flu Shot* Employee Assistance Program* Weight Loss Programs* Biometric Screening* Lifestyle or Behavioral Coaching* Wellness Newsletter* Web based Resources for Healthy Living* Smoking Cessation Program* Gym Membership Discounts or On Site Exercise Facilities* Other Wellness Program* 4% 19% 27% 18% 26% 22% 33% 38% 26% 26% 15% 47% 52% 48% 51% 58% 60% 87% 79% All Large Firms (200 or More Workers) All Small Firms (3 199 Workers) 77% 64% 64% 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100% * Estimate is statistically different between All Small Firms and All Large Firms within category (p<.05). ^ Biometric screening is a health examination that measures an employee's risk factors such as cholesterol, blood pressure, stress, and nutrition. SOURCE: Kaiser/HRET Survey of Employer Sponsored Health Benefits, 2014. KAREN POLLITZ 1

Among Firms Offering Health and Wellness Benefits, Percentage of Firms That Offer Incentives to Employees Who Participate in Wellness Programs, by Firm Size, 2014 Workers Pay Smaller Percentage of the Premium Workers Have Smaller Deductible Receive Higher HRA or HSA Contributions Receive Gift Cards, Travel, Merchandise, or Cash Any Financial Incentive to Participate in Wellness Program FIRM SIZE 3-49 Workers 8% 1% 0% 12% 16% 50-199 Workers 6 2 9 23 28 200-999 Workers 11 3 6 22 32 1,000-4,999 Workers 24 3 14 31 51 5,000 or More Workers 23 6* 17 34 55 All Small Firms (3-199 Workers) 8% 1% 2% 13% 18% All Large Firms (200 or More Workers) 14% 3% 8% 24% 36% ALL FIRMS 8% 1% 2% 14% 19% Source: Kaiser/HRET Survey of Employer Sponsored Health Benefits, 2014. Wellness Programs Offering Incentives Based on Health Status Implicate ERISA Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) prohibits group health plan discrimination based health status Exceptions for certain workplace wellness programs allowed The Affordable Care Act (ACA) amended workplace wellness program standards under ERISA ACA defined two types of wellness programs: Health contingent wellness programs offer reward (or avoidance of penalty) based on an individual s health status 5 new standards for health contingent programs specified Participatory wellness programs do not adjust health plan premiums or benefits based on individual s health status Standards for health contingent wellness programs do not apply KAREN POLLITZ 2

ACA Standards for Health Contingent Wellness Programs Financial incentive cannot exceed 30% of total plan cost; Up to 50% of plan cost if tobacco incentives included; Based on family plan cost if dependents can participate 2014 average plan cost was $6,025 (self only) $16,834 (family) Offer waivers, reasonable alternative means to earn reward At least annual opportunity to earn reward Notice requirements Reasonably designed: Program has reasonable chance of promoting health, is not overly burdensome, not a subterfuge for discrimination The reasonably designed standard is intended to be an easy standard to satisfy... There does not need to be a scientific record that the method promotes wellness to satisfy this standard. The standard is intended to allow experimentation in diverse ways of promoting wellness. Source: 78 Federal Register 33162 Large Firm Wellness Programs That Reward Employees for Meeting Biometric Outcome, and Value of Incentives, 2014 100% 100% 90% 90% 80% 80% 42% 70% 60% 50% 70% 60% 50% Financial Incentive Worth More Than or Equal to $500 40% 30% 20% 40% 30% 20% 58% Financial Incentive Worth Less Than $500 10% 4% 10% 0% Employees Rewarded or Penalized for Meeting Biometric Outcomes 0% Employees Rewarded or Penalized for Meeting Biometric Outcomes NOTE: Biometric screening is a health examination that measures an employee's risk factors. Biometric outcomes could include meeting a target body mass index (or BMI) or cholesterol level but not goals related to smoking. SOURCE: Kaiser/HRET Survey of Employer Sponsored Health Benefits, 2014. KAREN POLLITZ 3

One third of employers with health benefits offer workers opportunity to complete health risk assessment (HRA) Large Firms Offering HRA Small Firms Offering HRA 51% Yes No 34% Yes No Source: KFF/HRET Employer Health Benefits Survey, 2014 Large Firm Wellness Programs that Offer Incentives to Complete HRA, and Value of the Incentive, 2014 Percentage of Large Firms Offering Health Risk Assessment that Offer Financial Incentives to Complete a Health Risk Assessment Among Large Firms Offering Financial Incentives for Completing Health Risk Assessment, Maximum Value of Incentive Less Than $500 $500 or More FIRM SIZE 200-999 Workers 46% 63% 37% 1,000-4,999 Workers 64 67 33 5,000 or More Workers 64 52 48 All Large Firms 51% 64% 36% Source: Kaiser/HRET Survey of Employer Sponsored Health Benefits, 2014. KAREN POLLITZ 4

Wellness Programs Making Medical Inquiries Implicate the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) ADA prohibits employment discrimination based on disability ADA prohibits non job related medical inquiries by employers except through voluntary wellness programs EEOC guidance in 2000 said voluntary means employee cannot be required to participate or penalized for not participating Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA) has parallel provisions about medical inquiries through wellness programs Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) enforcement actions in 2014 against employers that penalized workers for not completing wellness program medical inquiries EEOC proposed rule in April 2015 would modify ADA standards Standards different for wellness programs offered as part of a group health plan vs. outside of group health plan KAREN POLLITZ 5

Proposed ADA standards for wellness programs with medical inquiries and offered as part of a group health plan Financial incentives, whether reward or penalty, permitted up to maximum of 30% of total self only cost of group health plan Incentive maximum applies to health contingent and participatory wellness programs Incentive maximum applies to all participation incentives combined, including those offered for health contingent wellness programs Notice standard requires workers to be notified what health information will be collected, how it will be used, what privacy protections apply Compliance with HIPAA privacy standards generally satisfies ADA privacy protections when wellness programs are offered as part of a group health plan Part of a group health plan not defined Proposed ADA standards for workplace wellness programs offered as part or outside of the group health plan All wellness programs that make medical inquiries must be reasonably designed, not overly burdensome, not subterfuge for discrimination, A program is not reasonably designed if it exists mainly to shift costs from the employer to targeted employees based on their health Public comment requested on best practices to ensure wellness programs are designed to promote health and do not shift costs to employees with health conditions KAREN POLLITZ 6

RAND studies of workplace wellness programs RAND study found wellness programs reduced health care costs by $30 per member per month, on average 87% of savings attributable to disease management programs Lifestyle programs yield significant health improvements, though modest, not clinically significant Impact of incentives on wellness program participation Financial incentives increase participation by 20 percentage points Strengthening program design nearly as effective as incentives 52% median participation rate in comprehensive programs 20% median participation rate in limited programs Elements of successful programs: * Clear communications * Engage managers * Engage all employees * Culture of wellness * Convenient, accessible, relevant * Ongoing evaluation KAREN POLLITZ 7