Class 16 Insurance and Risk Management - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 53
About This Presentation
Title:

Class 16 Insurance and Risk Management

Description:

convertible to individual cash value policy within 31 days after leaving group ... Benefit is some multiple of the group life insurance benefit ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:98
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 54
Provided by: geor8
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Class 16 Insurance and Risk Management


1
Class 16Insurance and RiskManagement
  • George D. Krempley
  • Bus. Fin. 640
  • Autumn Quarter 2006

2
Group Insurance
  • Coverage of many persons under one contract
  • Low-cost protection
  • Evidence of insurability usually not required
  • Subject to experience rating

3
Group Underwriting Principles
  • Insurance incidental to the group
  • Flow of persons through the group
  • Automatic determination of benefits
  • Minimum participation
  • Third-party sharing of cost
  • Simple and efficient administration

4
Eligible Groups
  • Types of groups eligible for group insurance are
    determined by state law
  • individual employers
  • multiple employers
  • unions
  • debtors of a common creditor
  • miscellaneous groups
  • Size requirements
  • Traditionally 10 lives
  • Now as small as 2 or 3 lives

5
Eligibility Requirements
  • Be a full-time employee
  • Satisfy a probationary period
  • Apply for insurance during the eligibility period
  • Be actively at work when insurance becomes
    effectives

6
Group Life Insurance Plans
  • Group Term Life Insurance
  • Group Accidental Death and Dismemberment
    Insurance (ADD)
  • Group Universal Life Insurance

7
Group Life Insurance
  • 6.9 trillion group life in force (year-end 2002)
  • 42 of total life insurance in force

8
Group Term Life Insurance
  • Characteristics
  • low cost coverage
  • yearly renewable term insurance
  • convertible to individual cash value policy
    within 31 days after leaving group
  • Major advantage low cost

9
Group Term Life Insurance
  • Disadvantages
  • prohibitively expensive for older workers to
    convert
  • no savings for retirement
  • temporary protection

10
Group AD D
  • Pays additional benefits if employee dies in an
    accident or incurs certain types of bodily
    injury.
  • Benefit is some multiple of the group life
    insurance benefit
  • For example 1 or 2 times the insurance on the
    employees life.
  • Full ADD benefit (the principal sum) paid if
    the employee dies in an accident.
  • Percentage of principal sum paid for certain
    types of dismemberment.

11
Group Universal Life
  • Similar to individual universal life
  • Employees have flexibility in payment of premiums
  • Can make loans and withdrawals.
  • But it is group insurance
  • Insurance issued on guaranteed basis up to
    certain limits with no evidence of insurability.
  • Employee pays premiums by payroll deduction.
  • Option of continuing the insurance after
    retirement.
  • Also plan design varies from individual UL.
  • See p. 484 of text

12
Group Medical Expense Providers
  • Commercial insurers
  • Blue Cross and Blue Shield plans
  • Managed care organizations
  • Self-insured plans by employers

13
Self-Insured Plans
  • Employer pays direct cost of health insurance to
    employees
  • Usually have stop loss insurance
  • Commercial insurer pays claims exceeding certain
    dollar amount
  • Subject to a maximum limit
  • Administrative services only (ASO) contract
  • Plan design
  • Claims processing
  • Actuarial support
  • Record-keeping

14
Self-Insured Plans Advantages
  • Under ERISA, self-insured plans generally not
    subject to state regulation
  • National employer does not have to comply with
    separate state laws.
  • Costs reduced or increase less rapidly because of
    savings in
  • State premium taxes
  • Commissions
  • Insurers profit

15
Self-insured Plans
  • Employer retains part or all of the funds needed
    to pay claims and earns interest until the claims
    are paid.
  • Exempt from state laws that require insured plans
    to offer certain state-mandated benefits.

16
Basic Medical Expense Insurance
  • Usually provides the following basic benefits
  • Hospital expense insurance
  • Surgical expense insurance
  • Physicians visits
  • Diagnostic X-ray and laboratory benefits and
    other miscellaneous benefits

17
Major Medical Insurance
  • Two Types
  • Supplemental major medical insurance
  • Comprehensive major medical insurance

18
Basic CharacteristicsMajor Medical Insurance
  • Broad coverage
  • High maximum limits
  • Deductible (typically calendar year)
  • Coinsurance (typically 80-20 percent)
  • Stop-loss limit
  • Exclusions

19
EXHIBIT 22.1 Total Health Benefit Cost per
Active Employee, 19942003
20
Managed Care
  • Generic name for medical expense plans that
    provide covered services to the members in a
    cost-effective manner.

21
Managed Care Plan Characteristics
  • Employees choice of physicians and hospitals may
    be limited to certain health-care providers
  • Cost control and reduction are heavily
    emphasized
  • Utilization review is done at all levels
  • Quality of the care provided by physicians is
    carefully monitored and evaluated
  • Health-care providers share in the financial
    results through various risk-sharing techniques
  • Preventive care and healthy life styles are
    emphasized.

22
Types of Managed Care Plans
  • Health maintenance organization (HMO)
  • Preferred provider organization (PPO)
  • Point-of-service plan (POS)
  • Exclusive provider organization (PPO)

23
Health Maintenance Organization
  • Managed care plan that provides broad
    comprehensive services to its members for a
    fixed, prepaid fee.
  • Traditional HMOs limit choice of health care
    providers to providers who are part of HMO
    network.
  • Some HMOs allow employees to use health care
    providers outside of plan network by payment of
    higher out-of-pocket fees.
  • Cost control and cost reduction are heavily
    emphasized
  • Utilization review is done at all levels
  • Quality of care provided by physicians is
    monitored and evaluated.

24
Preferred Provider Organization
  • Plan that contracts with health care providers to
    provide medical services to the members at
    reduced fees.
  • Members are free to use any health care provider
    of their choice.
  • However, employees have strong financial
    incentive to use preferred provider because
    deductible and coinsurance charges are reduced.
  • If health care providers actual charge exceeds
    negotiated fee, provider absorbs excess amount,
    with substantial cost saving to patients.

25
Point of Service Plan
  • Typically structured as an HMO, but members can
    go outside the network for medical care.
  • If patients see health care providers who are
    part of the network, they pay little or nothing
    out of pocket, which is similar to an HMO.
  • If patients receive care from providers outside
    the network, they must pay substantially higher
    deductibles and coinsurance charges.

26
Exclusive Provider Organization
  • Plan that does not cover medical care outside a
    network of preferred providers.
  • If patients receive medical care outside the
    network, they must pay entire cost themselves.

27
Advantages Managed Care Plans
  • Lower hospital and surgical utilization rates
  • Members pay substantially lower out of pocket
    costs if they stay in the network
  • No claims forms
  • Helped hold down rate of increase in health care
    costs
  • True earlier
  • Major reversal in trend recently

28
Disadvantages Managed Care Plans
  • Lower quality of medical care
  • Failure to promptly refer to specialists
  • Not admitting patients to hospital
  • Not performing diagnostic tests
  • Skimping on preventive care
  • Physicians freedom to treat patients impaired
  • Prior approval of diagnostic tests
  • Must argue for additional days of hospital care
  • Delay or denial of specialist referral
  • Limitation in use of prescription drugs
  • Gag rule on discussing alternative methods of
    treatment

29
Disadvantages Managed Care Plans (cont.)
  • Network physicians have a conflict of interest
    between
  • Providing highest quality care to patient
  • Holding down costs to increase plan profits and
    generate higher amount of bonus

30
EXHIBIT 22.2 Estimated Deaths Attributable to
Failure to Deliver Recommended Care Selected
Measures/Conditions (U.S. Population)
31
Patient Bill of RightsSelected Items Proposed
  • Patients harmed by denial of care are given right
    to sue managed care plan
  • Plan must pay for emergency room care even if
    hospital outside network
  • Allow women to
  • See Obstetrician and Gynecologist without prior
    approval
  • Designate them as primary doctor

32
Patient Bill of Rights (cont.)
  • Requires payment of routine health care costs
    associated with clinical trials
  • Defines medical necessity
  • Prohibits plans from interfering with doctors
    care if services are medically necessary
  • Allows patients to appeal denials through an
    internal process and then outside experts

33
Current Developments Managed Care Plans
  • Declining HMO enrollments
  • Changes in plan design. Increases in
  • Deductibles
  • Coinsurance and co-payment charges
  • Annual out of pocket expense limit

34
Current Developments Managed Care Plans (cont.)
  • Three-tier co-payment for prescription drugs
  • Generic
  • Brand on approved list
  • Brand not on approved list
  • Consumer directed health care plans

35
EXHIBIT 22.3 National Employee Enrollment in
Health Care Plans, 19932003 ( of All Covered
Employees)
36
Health Savings Plans
  • Tax-exempt trust or custodial account
  • Which pays qualified medical expenses
  • Under a high-deductible health insurance plan

37
HSA Tax Advantages
  • Contributions are tax-deductible
  • Investment income accumulates tax-free
  • Distributions are tax-free if used to pay for
    qualified medical expenses

38
Group Medical Key Contractual Provisions
  • Preexisting conditions
  • Coordination of benefits
  • Continuation of coverage

39
Preexisting Conditions
  • Under the Health Insurance Portability and
    Accountability Act (HIPAA), a preexisting
    condition is defined as
  • A medical condition diagnosed or treated during
    the previous six months.
  • HIPAA places limits on the right of insurers and
    employers to deny or limit coverage for
    preexisting conditions.

40
Preexisting Conditions (cont.)
  • Employer-sponsored group health insurance plans
    cannot exclude or limit coverage for a
    preexisting condition for more than 12 months (18
    months for late enrollees).
  • Preexisting condition is defined as a medical
    condition diagnosed or treated during the
    previous six months.
  • Preexisting condition exclusion cannot be applied
    to pregnancy, newly born children, or adopted
    children.

41
Preexisting Conditions (cont.)
  • After initial 12-month period expires, no new
    preexisting condition period may ever be imposed
    on workers who maintain continuous coverage
  • with no more than a 63-day gap in coverage, even
    if the workers should change jobs or health
    plans.
  • Insurers and employers must give credit for
    previous coverage of less than 12 months with
    respect to any preexisting condition exclusion
    found in the new health plan.

42
Coordination of Benefits
  • Specifies the order of payment when an insured is
    covered under two or more group health insurance
    plans.
  • Total recovery under all plans is limited to 100
    percent of all covered expenses.
  • Purpose is to prevent overinsurance and
    duplication of benefits if an insured is covered
    by more than one plan.

43
Coordination of Benefits
  • Coordination-of-benefit provisions based on
    complex rules developed by NAIC
  • Coverage as an employee is usually primary to
    coverage as a dependent.
  • With respect to dependent children, if parents
    are married or are not separated,
  • the plan of the parent whose birthday occurs
    first during the year is primary
  • the plan of the parent with the later birthday is
    secondary.

44
Coordination of Benefits (cont.)
  • Absent a court order, if parents of dependent
    children are not married, or are separated or are
    divorced
  • The plan of the parent who is awarded custody
    pays first.
  • The plan of the stepparent who is the spouse of
    the parent awarded custody pays second.
  • he plan of the parent without custody pays third.
  • The plan of the stepparent who is the spouse of
    the parent without custody pays last.

45
Continuation of Coverage
  • Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of
    1985 (also known as COBRA) provides that
  • If a qualifying event occurs that results in a
    loss of coverage
  • Employees and covered dependents can elect to
    remain in employers plan for limited period
    under
  • COBRA applies to firms with 20 or more employees.

46
Continuation of Coverage
  • A qualifying event includes
  • termination of employment for any reason (except
    gross misconduct),
  • divorce or legal separation
  • death of the employee
  • attainment of a maximum age by dependent
    children.

47
Continuation of Coverage
  • If the worker loses his or her job or no longer
    works the required number of hours,
  • Terminated worker and covered dependents can
    elect to remain in the employers plan for up to
    18 months.
  • However, they must pay 102 percent of the group
    rate.
  • If the worker dies or is divorced or legally
    separated or has a child who is no longer
    eligible for coverage,
  • Covered dependents have the right to remain in
    the group plan for up to three years.

48
Group Dental Insurance Scheduled Plan
  • Various dental services are listed in a schedule,
  • Flat dollar amount is paid for each service
  • If dentist charges more than the specified
    amount, patient must pay the difference

49
Group Dental Insurance Nonscheduled Plan
  • Also called comprehensive dental insurance
  • Most dental services are covered, including
  • oral examinations
  • X-rays
  • Cleaning
  • Fillings
  • extractions, inlays
  • bridgework and dentures
  • oral surgery
  • root canals
  • orthodontia.
  • Dentists are reimbursed on the basis of their
    reasonable and customary charges subject to any
    limitations on benefits stated in the plan.

50
Group Short-term Disability
  • Typically have following characteristics
  • benefits paid from 13 weeks to two years
  • short elimination period (e.g., one to seven
    days)
  • benefits are a percentage of earnings
  • only nonoccupational disability covered
  • relatively few exclusions

51
Group Long-term Disability
  • Typically have the following characteristics
  • benefits paid to age 65 or later
  • dual definition of disability used
  • elimination waiting period of 3 to 6 months
  • both occupational and nonoccupational
    disabilities covered
  • workers compensation and Social Security offset
  • accrual of pension benefit
  • cost-of-living adjustment

52
Cafeteria Plans
  • Allow employees to select those employee benefits
    that best meet their specific needs.
  • Employees typically are given a certain number of
    dollars or credits that can be spent on the
    different benefits or taken as cash.

53
Cafeteria Plans Flexible Spending Account
  • Some plans also have flexible spending account
  • also called a reimbursement account
  • Employee agrees to a voluntary reduction in
    salary.
  • Amount of salary reduced is then used to pay for
    any plan benefits.
  • Because workers salary is reduced
  • taxes deducted are less
  • spendable income is increased.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com