{"title":"Small employers and self-insured health benefits: too small to succeed?","authors":"Tracy Yee, Jon B Christianson, Paul B Ginsburg","doi":"","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Over the past decade, large employers increasingly have bypassed traditional health insurance for their workers, opting instead to assume the financial risk of enrollees' medical care through self-insurance. Because self-insurance arrangements may offer advantages--such as lower costs, exemption from most state insurance regulation and greater flexibility in benefit design--they are especially attractive to large firms with enough employees to spread risk adequately to avoid the financial fallout from potentially catastrophic medical costs of some employees. Recently, with rising health care costs and changing market dynamics, more small firms--100 or fewer workers--are interested in self-insuring health benefits, according to a new qualitative study from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC). Self-insured firms typically use a third-party administrator (TPA) to process medical claims and provide access to provider networks. Firms also often purchase stop-loss insurance to cover medical costs exceeding a predefined amount. Increasingly competitive markets for TPA services and stop-loss insurance are making self-insurance attractive to more employers. The 2010 national health reform law imposes new requirements and taxes on health insurance that may spur more small firms to consider self-insurance. In turn, if more small firms opt to self-insure, certain health reform goals, such as strengthening consumer protections and making the small-group health insurance market more viable, may be undermined. Specifically, adverse selection--attracting sicker-than-average people--is a potential issue for the insurance exchanges created by reform.</p>","PeriodicalId":80012,"journal":{"name":"Issue brief (Center for Studying Health System Change)","volume":" 138","pages":"1-4"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2012-07-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Issue brief (Center for Studying Health System Change)","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Over the past decade, large employers increasingly have bypassed traditional health insurance for their workers, opting instead to assume the financial risk of enrollees' medical care through self-insurance. Because self-insurance arrangements may offer advantages--such as lower costs, exemption from most state insurance regulation and greater flexibility in benefit design--they are especially attractive to large firms with enough employees to spread risk adequately to avoid the financial fallout from potentially catastrophic medical costs of some employees. Recently, with rising health care costs and changing market dynamics, more small firms--100 or fewer workers--are interested in self-insuring health benefits, according to a new qualitative study from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC). Self-insured firms typically use a third-party administrator (TPA) to process medical claims and provide access to provider networks. Firms also often purchase stop-loss insurance to cover medical costs exceeding a predefined amount. Increasingly competitive markets for TPA services and stop-loss insurance are making self-insurance attractive to more employers. The 2010 national health reform law imposes new requirements and taxes on health insurance that may spur more small firms to consider self-insurance. In turn, if more small firms opt to self-insure, certain health reform goals, such as strengthening consumer protections and making the small-group health insurance market more viable, may be undermined. Specifically, adverse selection--attracting sicker-than-average people--is a potential issue for the insurance exchanges created by reform.
在过去的十年里,越来越多的大型雇主绕过了传统的员工健康保险,而是选择通过自我保险来承担参保人员医疗保健的财务风险。由于自我保险安排可能会带来一些优势——比如成本更低、不受大多数州保险监管以及福利设计更大的灵活性——它们对拥有足够员工的大公司尤其有吸引力,这些公司可以充分分散风险,以避免一些员工潜在的灾难性医疗费用带来的财务后果。美国卫生系统变革研究中心(Center for study health System Change,简称HSC)的一项新的定性研究显示,最近,随着医疗成本的上升和市场动态的变化,越来越多员工人数在100人或以下的小公司对自我投保医疗福利感兴趣。自我保险公司通常使用第三方管理人(TPA)来处理医疗索赔并提供访问供应商网络的权限。公司还经常购买止损保险,以支付超过预定金额的医疗费用。贸易促进权服务和止损保险市场竞争日益激烈,这使得自我保险对更多雇主具有吸引力。2010年的国家医疗改革法对医疗保险提出了新的要求和税收,这可能会刺激更多的小企业考虑自保。反过来,如果更多的小公司选择自保,某些医疗改革目标,如加强消费者保护和使小团体医疗保险市场更可行,可能会受到损害。具体来说,逆向选择——吸引比平均水平更弱的人——是改革后保险交易所面临的一个潜在问题。