The company is among a handful of large American employers who are
getting more deeply involved in managing their workers' health
instead of looking to insurers to do it. Cisco last year began
offering its employees a plan it negotiated directly with nearby
Stanford Health medical system.
Under the plan, physicians are supposed to keep costs down by
closely tracking about a dozen health indicators to prevent
expensive emergencies, and keep Cisco workers happy with their care.
If they meet these goals, Stanford gets a bonus. If they fail,
Stanford pays Cisco a penalty.
At the center of it all is a spacious clinic inside Cisco's San Jose
campus, the first point of contact for many employees and their
families. They often see Dr. Larry Kwan, a Stanford Health general
physician who rubs shoulders with workers in the cafeteria and
company gym.
"I'm in their space. I'm actually where they work," Dr. Kwan said.
"I'm a bit of a village doc."
Cisco said costs for Stanford plan patients are 10 percent lower
than conventional coverage still used by most of its employees.
Chipmaker Intel Corp told Reuters it is saving 17 percent on its
workers enrolled in a similar plan, known as Connected Care.
Aircraft manufacturer Boeing Co and Walmart Inc, the world's largest
retailer, have likewise hammered out health plans directly with
providers.
The movement is small, just a few very large U.S. corporations that
have signed up tens of thousands of workers so far. Their early
efforts show the challenges of changing behaviors among patients and
doctors.
But they speak volumes about corporate America's frustration with
inexorably rising medical costs and the traditional insurers that
sell them coverage.
"Before they were simply saying 'Okay, our vendor is going to help
us with this,'" said John Jackson, who handles corporate programs
like Cisco's for Stanford Health. "Many are no longer willing to do
that."
Corporations help pay for healthcare for more than 170 million
Americans, in most cases working with an insurer to handle
everything from the price of treatments to medical claims.
These employers will spend an estimated $738 billion on health
benefits in 2018, a figure that has been rising about 5 percent
annually in recent years, according to federal data.
CUE AMAZON
Other big firms are watching closely. Amazon.com Inc, JPMorgan Chase
& Co and Berkshire Hathaway Inc said in January they will form an
independent company to improve healthcare for their roughly 750,000
U.S. employees, prompting speculation that they would displace
health insurers and other industry "middlemen".
Amazon and partners say they will use big-data analysis and other
high-tech tools to improve care and cut wasteful spending. The trio
will study the new plans coming from Intel and other pioneers, a
source close to the venture told Reuters.
If they do, they will find plenty of hurdles. Reuters interviews
with executives at Cisco, Intel and Boeing and their health partners
revealed similar challenges.
Chief among them is habit. Many workers will not stray from
conventional plans because they like their doctors or worry about
access to the best specialists.
To boost enrollment, all three companies have dangled sweeteners
such as extra money for health savings accounts or lower monthly
premiums and co-pays. The approach also requires employers to take a
more hands-on role.
"It's not something that you just turn the switch and not manage,"
said Katelyn Johnson, Cisco's senior integrated health manager for
global benefits.
Cisco's experiment began in 2008 when it opened the campus clinic
for all of its employees there. Designed like a spa, the facility
offered primary care in new-age sounding treatment areas: body,
mind, heart and spirit.
The savings were notable: about 30 percent compared to an offsite
doctor's office. Cisco later brought in Stanford to develop a
full-blown medical plan, which took effect in 2017. Stanford
operates the clinic and provides more specialized services through
Stanford University's medical system.
Like a health maintenance organization, the plan requires enrollees
to stick to a closed network of doctors. There is emphasis on
primary care and fewer referrals to specialists. Treatment for back
pain, for example, often begins with physical therapy at the clinic.
Cisco also mandates that Stanford track a dozen health measures,
including glycemic levels for diabetics and blood pressure for those
with hypertension.
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Johnson said fewer than 1,000 people are enrolled, below Cisco's
goal of 1,300 for 2018. The plan has yet to make a dent in Cisco's
$500 million annual healthcare tab, which has been rising by 3
percent to 4 percent in recent years.
Still, Cisco is encouraged enough by the savings that it may expand
the program to the company's second-largest U.S. center, in North
Carolina's Research Triangle Park.
"What we were doing in the past wasn't really working," Johnson
said. "So this model ... is worth it."
CHIPPING AWAY AT CHALLENGES
Experts warn Cisco's approach is not suitable for most employers.
For starters, companies need thousands of employees in one place,
usually a city, said David Muhlestein, Chief Research Officer at
healthcare consultancy Leavitt Partners in Washington D.C. Then
their healthcare partner needs to be committed to improving patient
health, rather than just offering a discount to win a big client.
"There are not a ton of providers who are really well positioned to
make those changes," Muhlestein said.
Santa Clara, Calif.-based Intel says it has found such partners
since it launched its Connected Care health plan five years ago.
About 38,000 employees and dependents are now enrolled in Arizona,
California, New Mexico and Oregon.
Technology is critical to curbing costs. In Oregon, patients are
encouraged to use video conferencing to speak with physicians when
appropriate. At $49, the cost is one-third of an office visit.
Jennifer Leo, a 41-year old Intel project manager in Hillsboro,
Oregon, chose Connected Care mainly because it covers 100 percent of
her husband's insulin, a drug whose U.S. retail price has more than
doubled over the past five years.
Hospital network Providence Health & Services tracks her husband's
condition closely. But Leo said she, too, got personal attention
when she came down with a sinus infection on a weekend.
She booked a quick video appointment with a doctor, who prescribed
an antibiotic. The next day, the office of her primary care
physician reached out to "check that everything got taken care of,"
Leo said.
Such follow-through has led to high patient satisfaction; Connected
Care boasts a 95 percent enrollee retention rate, says Angela
Mitchell, Intel's head of U.S. healthcare delivery.
And it has curbed costs and boosted patient health, she said. Last
year, for example, 78 percent of diabetics on the plan had their
sugar levels under control, up from 69 percent in 2016, Mitchell
said. Spending on people with the most complex health conditions was
about 10 percentage points lower than on those with comparable
issues outside the plan.
Intel spent nearly $700 million on healthcare last year, up about 1
percent from $690 million in 2016.
Still, Intel employees will sometimes ask Mitchell for help when
they cannot see specialists quickly enough. In some cases, she will
intervene and call the health system directly to make it happen.
"There are thousands of doctors in these networks. We're not trying
to act like it's perfect every single time," Mitchell said.
Boeing, too, has hit some snags with plans it negotiated directly
with hospitals in four states covering 15,000 employees plus family
members.
Doctors have willingly prescribed cheaper generic drugs, says Boeing
global healthcare head Jeff White. But getting them to commit to,
say, physical therapy first before scheduling a costly knee
replacement has been harder, he said.
White said direct arrangements have boosted quality and saved Boeing
money; he declined to provide exact figures. The aircraft maker
spends about $2.4 billion annually on healthcare for more than
120,000 U.S. workers and their dependents.
Some healthcare experts point to the inherent conflict for
providers: If they prevent expensive health crises through better
care, they also lose out on more profitable services, such as
hospital admissions.
"That's the challenge of trying to ask the health system to save
money," said Jack Hoadley, a health policy expert at Georgetown
University.
(Reporting by Caroline Humer; Editing by Michele Gershberg, Elyse
Tanouye and Marla Dickerson)
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