Your Money: Big companies explore virtual care to curb healthcare costs
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[August 14, 2019] By
Beth Pinsker
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Big companies are
increasing incorporating virtual technology and care options into
employee benefit plans to combat the rising healthcare costs that long
been corporate America's bugaboo, according to the annual survey of the
National Business Group on Health.
The No. 1 goal for employers in 2020 is to implement more virtual care
provisions. This includes things like behavioral health over video chat,
digital coaching, condition management and sleep therapies, according to
the NBGH, a research group that represents large employers.
"Virtual solutions are scalable. They improve convenience and access,"
said Brian Marcotte, president and chief executive of NBGH.
Overall, healthcare costs are projected to rise 5% for 2020, the survey
said. In past years, especially during the 2008 recession, that number
had been about double, Marcotte said.
Actual costs may be rising at a slower pace than that 5% forecast
indicates, since employers typically add in a cushion, said Marcotte.
For instance, cost inflation for 2018 turned out to be just 3.6% for
2018, while the projection was 6%.
Even as the price of care, especially drugs, has increased, costs have
been held in check because usage of healthcare benefits has not gone up
- largely achieved by raising policyholders' deductibles.
Virtual care programs reduce use of emergency services by getting
front-line care to people without access, like rural communities, and to
people like shift workers, or post-partum moms, who have trouble making
in-person appointments.
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Nurse Health Practitioner Rachelle Quimpo (C) introduces patient
Shreya Sasaki to Dr. Heidi Meyer, MD Family Medicine, who appears on
a video screen remotely at a newly opened Kaiser Permanente health
clinic inside a Target retail department store in San Diego,
California November 17, 2014. REUTERS/Mike Blake
"It's not about too much money being spent, but that too many people have needs
that are not being met by outpatient services," said Jeff Levin-Scherz, health
management practice co-leader at Willis Towers Watson, a benefits consultant.
A separate survey Willis Towers Watson found that 81 percent of employers
currently offer or plan to offer tele-behavioral health services by 2020.
MORE CHOICE
Another trend for 2020: Large companies that shifted to only high-deductible
offerings are starting to add back choice options.
In 2018, forty percent of large companies offered only high-deductible plan
options. In 2019, that dropped to 30%, and NBGH forecasts it will fall to 25% in
2020.
Marcotte attributes the reversal to companies no longer worried about the effect
of the so-called "Cadillac Tax," which would have imposed fees on the most
generous benefit plans.
Low unemployment is also a driving factor, given that companies now have to
compete to retain workers.
(Follow us @ReutersMoney or at http://www.reuters.com/finance/personal-finance.
Editing by Lauren Young)
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