LIMITED BENEFIT PLANS An Opportunity for Brokers, a Tool for Employers and a Solution for the Uninsured. Focus Report March 2009

Similar documents
From the AP-NORC Center s Employer Survey objective metrics of health plan quality information, and most

Prior to getting your Medicaid or health coverage through the marketplace, would you have been able to access and/or afford this care?

6 Reasons to Add a Medicare Advantage Plan to Your Group Coverage

What Texas School Officials Should Understand About the Affordable Care Act

Product & Services Catalog. Benefit Plan Designs that Make Sense!

Women and Employer Mandates

A Framework for a Private Insurance Exchange Offering

Offering short-term insurance for 30 years

Partnership at Age 50

Affordable Care Act and You

Study of Employee Benefits Trends

NEW YORK STATE AUTOMOBILE DEALERS ASSOCIATION & SYRACUSE AUTO DEALERS ASSOCIATION September 16, 2014 Meeting Syracuse, New York

What is The Affordable Care Act and how does it affect me?

Introduction. 3 Focus on motivations that most impact decision-making; develop messages. Three key takeaways. White Paper GROUP BENEFITS

Trends in Worksite Marketing. Michael E. Weilant, FSA, MAAA Actuaries Club of the Southwest - Fall Meeting November 10, 2005 Plano, TX

Health care costs are top

Reflecting changes from 2010 health reform law. Medicare Resource Guide Six Steps to Choosing Your Medicare Coverage

Here Are Things SEMA Members Need to Know

EXPANDING FLEXIBILITY, BUILDING LOYALTY

We ve got you covered:

The Small Business Guide to Section 105 Medical Expense Reimbursement Plans. A strategy for hiring and keeping the best employees

Preliminary Report on a Secure Benefit Set for the Public Employees Insurance Program (PEIP)

CENTER FOR HEALTHCARE RESEARCH & TRANSFORMATION

Fixed Indemnity Benefits for Field Associates

Medicaid Benefits for Children and Adults: Issues Raised by the National Governors Association s Preliminary Recommendations

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. Introduction

U.S. HEALTH-CARE REFORM: THE PATIENT PROTECTION AND AFFORDABLE CARE ACT

Affordable Care Act: Key Issues for Employers in 2014 and Beyond

Rate Component Overview

HEALTH CARE LAW PRIMER

The Utah Health Exchange Ten Lessons Learned from the Utah Experience Ten Presented by Speaker David Clark Utah House of Representatives

m e d i c a i d Five Facts About the Uninsured

Medicare in Ryan s 2014 Budget By Paul N. Van de Water

CENCO STREET JOURNAL. May is Disability Insurance Awareness Month. Sales Idea of the Month. Check Out The Cenco Website:

Private Insurance Exchanges PERFORMANCE THAT MATTERS

Benefits Buyers Study 2015 FAST FACTS >

Charting the Life Course

Welcome to AARP s presentation focusing on the health care law so you ll know where your small business fits in to it all.

The State of Employee Benefits: Findings From the 2018 Health and Workplace Benefits Survey

NEW JERSEY COMPENSATION RATING & INSPECTION BUREAU HOW TO DETERMINE THE COST OF A WORKERS COMPENSATION INSURANCE POLICY

Voluntary Insurance: A Solution for Employers Complex Health Plan Challenges

Transamerica Center for Health Studies Survey: Employer Attitudes Toward the Employer Mandate and the ACA

A Publication by the Massachusetts Association of Health Plans. Health Insurance 101 How Are Premiums Developed for Individuals and Small Groups?

Planning for Health Care in Retirement

YOUR GUIDE TO HEALTH CARE REFORM

2018 healthcare benefits for retirees age 65 and older Welcome!

YOUR GUIDE TO HEALTH CARE REFORM

Using voluntary benefits to improve employee financial wellness and your bottom line

Private Exchanges One Employer s Perspective. April 2014

Financial Analysis of WellCare

Two by Four Coverage Solutions

Planning for Health Care in Retirement

The Affordable Care Act Update

Retirement Matters: Retirement Living. Slide 1

Planning for Health Care in Retirement

The Cost & Benefits of Short-Term Individual and Family Health Insurance Plans. June, policies surveyed were active in October 2011

Research Foundation (RF) Retiree Health Insurance Plan. Post-65 Medicare-Eligible Retiree Transition Guide

Medications can be a large

The Affordable Care Act (aka Obamacare ) What s really in the law? How does the ACA affect employers? What s next?

MANAGING YOUR COSTS IN RETIREMENT

Saving Money is the Overriding Concern for the Majority of People Shopping during This Year s ACA Open Enrollment

According to U.S. Census Bureau

Extend Health. New Health Coverage with More Choices

Middle-Income Boomers and Retirement. Tapping the Significant and Underserved Middle-Income Market

gbac APG Association Private Marketplace - Insurance Broker Training

Directory of Programs and Services

Figure 1. Differences in Out-of-Pocket Expenses for Poor Beneficiaries in the House and Senate Low-Income Subsidy Programs $1,200 $150

How Will Health Reform Help?

New Approach to Retiree Health Care Coverage. New Choices Better Value

Proposals for Insurance Options That Don t Comply with ACA Rules: Trade-offs In Cost and Regulation

Affordable Care Act Survival Kit

Executive Summary for Benefit Planning

The retiree healthcare challenge: Driving better retirement outcomes and enhancing employee well-being

Bundled Payments and Employer Direct Contracting Redefine Benefits Landscape Employers and their brokers, Third Party Administrators (TPAs) and other

As 2017 approaches, small businesses should

MEDIGAP MADE SIMPLE. By Rick Teska Rick Teska. All Rights Reserved

Individual Health Insurance Options Boom or Bust

Horsemen s Perspective on National Health Care Reform

Financial Navigation Program

INFObrief Deloitte 2012 Survey of Health Care Consumers Health plans challenge; delivering on consumer preference

Aon Retiree Health Exchange What your Pre-Medicare retirees need to know

The 401(k) and the HSA: Partners in long-term savings opportunities

Your Health Insurance Options under Health Care Reform

Affordable Care Act. Small Businesses with 1-49 Employees. Simplified for. Questions?

Medicare Supplement Insurance Helps with the High Cost of Healthcare

Frequently Asked Questions about Health Care Reform and the Affordable Care Act

Exhibit 1. One-Quarter of All U.S. Working-Age Adults Have Visited the Health Insurance Marketplaces

The Basics of Medicare Lynn Davis

March 1, Dear Mr. Kouzoukas:

The Retirement Readiness Challenge:

THE AFFORDABLE CARE ACT

Pennsylvania Association of Health Underwriters Advisors and Advocates for Employers, Employees and Health Care Consumers

Health Care in America 2006 Survey

HELPING YOUR MEMBERS OPTIMIZE THEIR HIGH-DEDUCTIBLE HEALTH PLANS

Health Care Reform. Navigating The Maze Of. What s Inside

Medicare-Eligible Retiree Healthcare: Updates on Enrollment, HRA. USGRC April 7, 2017

THE MASSACHUSETTS HEALTH CARE REFORM ACT: COMING TO A STATE NEAR YOU?

Individual Health Insurance Marketplace FAQs Purdue Pre-65 Retiree

Affordable Care Act: The Wave To The Future Is Here!

Healthcare Benefits for NJM s Medicare-eligible Retirees, Spouses and Surviving Spouses

Transcription:

LIMITED BENEFIT PLANS An Opportunity for Brokers, a Tool for Employers and a Solution for the Uninsured Focus Report March 2009

Table of Contents Part I Part II Part III Part IV Part V Part VI Employers and Employees Alike Find Costs Associated with Major Medical Coverage Prohibitive Limited Benefit Plans: One Solution to Meeting the Needs of the Working Uninsured Why Limited Benefit Plans Make Sense Brokers Increasingly Becoming Comfortable with Limited Benefit Plans Educate, Educate, Educate Enrollment Is a Key Part of Success Part VII Limited Benefit Plans Align with Employers Primary Voluntary Benefits Objectives

Part I Employers and Employees Alike Find Costs Associated with Major Medical Coverage Prohibitive The healthcare debacle in this country is well-documented and the topic of many policy debates. While, historically, healthcare was seen as an assurance if you were employed, today that is no longer the case. Employers find the costs associated with offering their employees healthcare prohibitive, while workers find the out-of-pocket costs associated with healthcare premiums daunting. According to the Kaiser Foundation, the average cost of premiums for single coverage in 2008 was $392 per month, or $4,704 per year. The average cost of premiums for family coverage was $1,057 per month, or $12,680 per year. This is five percent higher than premium costs reported in 2007. 1 When compared to the typical median income of an American household ($50,233 in 2007, according to the U.S. Census Bureau), 2 it is not difficult to understand why many families are opting out of major medical plans. Concurrently, the Employee Benefits Research Institute shows the percentage of employers with fewer than 200 employees that offer benefits dropped from 68 percent in 2000 to 59 percent in 2007 a remarkable downward decline. 3 As the National Coalition on Healthcare notes: Most Americans have health insurance through their employers. But, employment is no longer a guarantee of health insurance coverage. 4 This fact is further evidenced by the statistical data: Nearly 46 million Americans, or 18 percent of the population under the age of 65, were without health insurance in 2007 (last year for which government data is available). The number of uninsured rose 2.2 million between 2005 and 2006, and has increased by almost eight million people since 2000. Over eight in 10 uninsured people come from working families almost 70 percent from families with one or more full-time workers and 11 percent from families with part-time workers. 4 In 2008, the average cost of premiums for single coverage was $392 per month and for family coverage $1,057 per month. 1

Part II Limited Benefit Plans: One Solution to Meeting the Needs of the Working Uninsured A limited benefit plan is an insurance product designed to help pay for non-catastrophic medical expenses. Plans pay for a limited set of benefits with a fixed benefit amount. Typically, these plans offer the five basic components of any medical plan. 1. Benefits for doctor s office visits 2. Preventative care 3. Diagnosis tests and x-rays 4. Hospital confinement 5. Prescription drugs The two main types of limited benefit plans are: 1. Indemnity-based A predetermined flat dollar amount is paid for each benefit. 2. Expense-based A percentage of the actual charge is paid for each benefit and a deductible might also be required. 5 Distinct from major medical insurance, limited benefit plans may be underwritten, while others are guarantee issue with no pre-existing condition limitations. 6 Benefit levels vary and covered features can be customized to keep premiums at affordable levels. Employers who can t afford to offer health coverage, or who have employees who don t qualify for the company s plan, are seen as natural prospects for this type of coverage. 5 The product is particularly relevant in industries with part-time, seasonal, temporary, hourly and 1099 employees. These include industries such as retail, grocery/supermarkets, hotel/motels, seasonal and construction. However, as Eastbridge Consulting notes in its 2008 Spotlight report on these plans: Any industry with uninsured workers is applicable. 7 Employers who traditionally have not been able to offer their employees health coverage because of its prohibitive cost often find the flexible funding options of these plans appealing. The plans can be offered on a voluntary basis, where the employee pays 100 percent of the premium. The cost-savings aspect of these plans to employees and employers alike is seen as the main driver in the marketplace. 7 Limited benefit plans are particularly relevant in industries with part-time, seasonal, temporary, hourly and 1099 employees. 7

Part III Why Limited Benefit Plans Make Sense Part IV Brokers Increasingly Becoming Comfortable with Limited Benefit Plans In addition to the affordability factor of these plans, many experts in the employee benefits marketplace argue the plans make sense when claim experience is evaluated. For example, Samuel H. Fleet, President and CEO of AmWINS Group Benefits, offered statistical data to support the idea that 97 percent of the typical workforce s claims will never exceed $25,000 in claims a year. Our statistics show that 8 percent of covered members will have no claims at all in a year, 61 percent will have claims of less than $1,000, and 85 percent will have claims less than $5,000. While some brokers have objections to limited benefit plans, many are adding the program to their list of offerings. More and more brokers are reaching for a product to serve employers priced out of traditional group insurance, according to Brian Robertson, executive VP of Fringe Benefit Group. And potential matches for limited benefit plans are plentiful. Retail, health care, hospitality and construction should all be considered, as well as the under-100-life market. 8 In increasingly difficult economic times, employee benefit advisers note that employers often believe they only have two options in regards to medical benefits: offering a major medical plan or no plan at all. In today s market, companies are starting to drop their benefits, said Henry Silva of Strategic Benefits Marketing Group in a recent Employee Benefit Adviser article. Not only do brokers underestimate the sales opportunities for limited benefit plans, but employers also misjudge employee appetite for the product. 9 The more brokers become educated about the benefits of limited benefit plans, the more likely they are to sell them. In fact, some brokers have embraced the plans so wholeheartedly that they deal exclusively with them. One such broker, Robyn Piper, featured in a June 2008 Benefits Selling article, is so well-versed in the plans, she advises carriers on how to put the plans together. 10 In elaborating on best practices in selling and administering the plans, Ms. Piper notes the importance of managing client expectations. I m a huge advocate for making communication clear and concise, for hitting clients all year with information about their benefits. What is a network? A lot of employees just don t know. 10 More and more brokers are reaching for a product to serve employers priced out of traditional group insurance. 8

Part V Educate, Educate, Educate Part VI Enrollment Is a Key Part of Success Repeatedly mentioned throughout every best practice article and study/survey on limited benefit plans is the need to educate both the employer and employee about these plans and how they differ from major medical insurance. Over-Communicate and educate is one of the key recommendations Eastbridge Consulting offers to brokers exploring limited benefit plans as an option. This is a complex product, and the target population may have limited access to traditional sources of benefit information and advice. Carriers need to plan for a comprehensive education and communication program prior to enrollment, during the process and afterwards. 7 Mini-med carriers offer similar advice. Underpromise and overdeliver, said Derek Peterman, CEO and founder Century Healthcare. No matter which carrier a broker works with, he has to further define the difference between a major medical plan and a mini-med. 11 Enrollment and access are the keys to success in the limited benefit market, notes Eastbridge Consulting. 7 An effective enrollment strategy, coupled with proper support, cannot be over-emphasized when discussing limited benefit plans. In companies with low-wage workers, many employees may have had little health insurance experience before, and others may be used to a different level of benefits. In both cases, it is important to make sure employees understand what is covered and what is not, intone industry experts. 12 While a host of carriers operate in the limited benefit space, many of their products are self-enrolled, leading to low participation and sometimes dissatisfaction from workers. In distinguishing one carrier from the next, Bob Bisceglia of Colonial Life notes, A top provider can meet one-on-one with each employee to explain the plan and help employees select the best coverage plan for their family s needs. 5 An effective enrollment strategy, coupled with proper support, cannot be over-emphasized when discussing limited benefit plans. 12

Part VII Limited Benefit Plans Align with Employers Primary Voluntary Benefits Objectives In the context of overall trends in employee benefits, limited benefit plans appear to be aligned with the two primary voluntary benefit objectives employers identified in Prudential s Study of Employee Benefits: 2008 and Beyond. 1. To attract and retain talent. 2. To maintain a competitive benefits package. According to the study, Roughly two in five companies offering voluntary benefits strongly agree that these programs have had a positive impact on employee satisfaction with their benefits program overall. Companies wanted to expand the products and services offered to their employees, but at minimal cost, and maintain the competitiveness of their overall benefits package. While cost-cutting was not cited as the primary driver for choosing a voluntary benefits plan, nearly half (46 percent) of all study respondents agree that offering voluntary benefits has helped to lower overall benefits costs to some extent, while 22 percent strongly agree that any cost savings have resulted. 13 Industry experts have observed that three main target markets have evolved within the limited benefit plan market. The first and most obvious is employers who do not have a major medical plan in place. Additionally, employers who do have major medical insurance, but fail to offer dependent coverage or offer high-deductible plans, are also a viable market. Finally, smaller groups with 50-100 lives seem to have the best closing ratios. Smaller groups lend themselves to a simplified decisionmaking process. These groups usually have employees in one location, making enrollment easier with group meetings or face-to-face consultations. If you are not actively learning more about the opportunities within the limited benefit market, you may be missing out on one of the future drivers of the employee benefits marketplace. Employers need innovative solutions to their healthcare coverage problems, and limited benefit plans are emerging as an increasingly palpable solution. Now is the perfect time to begin discussing these solution-oriented products with your clients and prospects. 1 Employer Health Benefits: 2008 Annual Survey, The Kaiser Family Foundation, September 2008. 2 Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States: 2007, U.S. Census Bureau, August 2008. 3 The Future of Employment-Based Health Benefits: Have Employers Reached a Tipping Point?, EBRI, February 2008, Vol. 29, No. 2. 4 Facts About Health Insurance, National Coalition on Health Insurance, January 2009. 5 Unlimited Potential of Limited Benefit Medical Plans, Life and Health Advisor, February 2008. 6 Health Insurance: Mini-Med Plans Are Invading, Insurance and Financial Advisor, September 2007. 7 Limited Medical Plans, Eastbridge Spotlight Report, May 2008. 8 Mini-Med Interest Forces Brokers To Abandon Traditional Objections, Employee Benefit Adviser, June 2008. 9 Mini-Meds Highlight Disconnect Between Brokers, Clients, and Workers, Employee Benefit Adviser, January 2009. 10 Carriers Call Her, Benefits Selling, June 2008. 11 Mini-Med Reality Check, Employee Benefit Adviser, March 1, 2007. 12 Follow The Money To Choose The Best Plan, Business Insurance, March 17, 2008. 13 Prudential Study of Employee Benefits: 2008 and Beyond, Prudential Insurance, 2008.

For more information, contact your representative or visit www.americangeneral.com/employeebenefits. To obtain additional educational resources and complimentary sales aides visit www.americangeneral.com/educationalresources. American General Life Companies, www.americangeneral.com, is the marketing name for the insurance companies and affiliates comprising the domestic life operations of American International Group, Inc. American General Life Companies insurers offer a broad spectrum of fixed and variable life insurance, annuities and accident and health products to serve the financial and estate planning needs of customers throughout the United States. Distributing products issued by AIG Life Insurance Company, American General Life Insurance Company, American International Life Assurance Company of New York and The United States Life Insurance Company in the City of New York (United States Life). Products may not be available in all states. American International Life Assurance Company of New York and United States Life are authorized to do an insurance business in New York. 2009 American International Group. All rights reserved. 06675015-2265 R03/09