
Psychiatr News October 20, 2006
Volume 41, Number 20, page 16
© 2006 American Psychiatric Association
Workers Dig Much Deeper To Pay Insurance Costs
Mark Moran
Cost-sharing requirements for insured workers have continued to increase
along with their premiums, with the average in-network PPO deductible reaching
$473 for single coverage.
Health insurance premiums for employer-sponsored health coverage rose
during the first five months of this year at the slowest rate since 2000, but
still increased more than twice as fast as workers' wages did.
According to the Kaiser Family Foundation and the Health Research and
Educational Trust (HRET) annual survey of employer health benefits, premiums
rose an average of 7.7 percent during the period of January to May this year.
That is less than the 9.2 percent increase recorded in 2005.
It was, however, still more than twice the average increase in workers'
wages (which was 3.8 percent) and in overall inflation (3.5 percent; see
chart).
Family health coverage now costs an average of $11,480 annually, with
workers paying an average of $2,973 toward those costs. That figure is about
$259 more than they paid last year and $1,354 more than workers paid toward
their premiums in 2000.
On average, workers are paying about 16 percent of their policy's premiums
for single coverage and 27 percent for family coverage, with their employers
paying the rest.
"While premiums didn't rise as fast as they have in recent years,
working people don't feel like they are getting any relief at all because
their premiums have been rising so much faster than their paychecks,"
said Kaiser Family Foundation President and CEO Drew Altman, Ph.D., in a press
release issued with the survey. "To working people and business owners,
a reduction in an already very high rate of increase just means you're still
paying more."
The annual Kaiser/HRET survey was conducted between January and May of this
year and included 3,159 randomly selected, nonfederal, public and private
firms with three or more employees.
Of those firms, 2,122 responded to the full survey; 1,037 that did not
respond were contacted by telephone and asked, "Does your company offer
or contribute to a health insurance program as a benefit to your
employees?" Responses to the phone question were included in overall
estimates of firms offering health benefits.
About 61 percent of U.S. firms offer health benefits to at least some of
their workers, statistically unchanged from last year's rate (60 percent).
While nearly all large businesses (defined as those with at least 200 workers)
offer health benefits to their workers, fewer than half of the smallest firms
(with three to nine workers) do.
The survey also revealed that employers do not express great confidence in
current strategies to contain rising health care costs. Just 17 percent of
small employers and 28 percent of large employers said they consider
disease-management programs "very effective" at controlling health
care costs.
They were even less likely to rate other strategies as very effective,
including consumer-directed health plans (16 percent of small and 13 percent
of large employers), higher employee cost sharing (15 percent of small and 13
percent of large firms), and tighter managed-care networks (9 percent of small
and 4 percent of large firms).
Also notable is the increase in cost-sharing required by most health plans.
The average in-network deductible in preferred provider organizations reached
$473 for single coverage. Average copayments for drugs across plan types were
$11 for generic drugs, $24 for preferred drugs, and $38 for nonpreferred
drugs, according to the survey.
"We are still losing the race between premiums and workers' earnings,
and if that trend persists, employer-based coverage will continue to decline
as fewer employers and workers can afford the cost of coverage," said
Jon Gabel, a study co-author and vice president of the Center for Studying
Health System Change.
"Employer Health Benefits: 2006 Annual Survey"
is posted at
<www.kff.org/insurance/7527>.
An article based on the report in the journal Health Affairs is
posted at
<http://content.healthaffairs.org/cgi/content/abstract/hlthaff.25.w476>.
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