Can an Employee Health Insurance Cooperative Benefit Your Organization

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Can an Employee Health Insurance Cooperative Benefit Your Organization

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Presentation of a Feasibility Study: A Self-Funded Health Insurance Cooperative ... Less guessing when budgeting for health insurance costs. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Can an Employee Health Insurance Cooperative Benefit Your Organization


1
Can an Employee Health Insurance Cooperative
Benefit Your Organization?
  • Presentation of a Feasibility Study A
    Self-Funded Health Insurance Cooperative
  • February 28, 2007

2
Presentation Overview
  • Why This Study? The Current Situation Ever
    Increasing Small Group Health Insurance Premiums
    and Pricing Volatility Threaten the
    Sustainability of Health Benefit Programs
  • An Alternative Spreading Risk and Maximizing
    Economies of Scale Through a Self-Funded Health
    Insurance Cooperative
  • Benefits of a Cooperative
  • Estimated Costs
  • Potential Obstacles
  • Next Steps

3
The Study
  • Initiated at the Request of McHenry County
    Municipalities to Research Joint Purchasing
    Programs for Health Insurance Benefits
  • Set Out to Answer the Question Would a
    Cooperative Health Plan Provide Better Value and
    Stabilized Pricing for Municipalities Versus
    Their Current Individual Health Plans?
  • Conducted by MCCG Ad Hoc Committee on Health
    Insurance from September 2005 to October 2006
  • Art Osten, Village of Fox River Grove
  • Dorothy Pfeuffer, Village of Lakewood
  • Claudett Peters, Village of Johnsburg
  • Janelle Crowley, City of Woodstock
  • Robert Ivetic, McHenry County
  • Roberta Rogers, Village of Lake in the Hills
  • Anna Bicanic Moeller, MCCG

4
The Study
  • Consultants Assisting with the Study and
    Providing Cost Estimates for a Self-Funded Health
    Insurance Cooperative
  • Mike Wojcik, Dennis Bautista and Bonnie Cochrane
    from the Horton Group
  • Catherine Loney from GCG Financial
  • These Consultants Were Asked to Assist With the
    Process Because of Their Experience with Public
    Health Insurance Cooperatives
  • Utilized demographic and health plan information
    from 13 municipalities and McHenry County (1,700
    Employee Lives in Study and Cost Estimates)
  • Village of Cary Village of Barrington Hills
  • Village of Fox River Grove Village of Johnsburg
  • City of Harvard Village of Huntley
  • Village of Lakewood Village of Lake in the
    Hills
  • City of Marengo City of McHenry
  • Village of Prairie Grove Village of Spring Grove
  • City of Woodstock

5
The Study
  • Final report for McHenry County and the thirteen
    McHenry County municipalities was distributed in
    November 2006, presented to the study group
    January 17, 2007 and presented to approximately
    40 municipalities outside of McHenry County on
    February 26, 2007
  • Process opened to municipalities outside of
    McHenry County to increase economies of scale and
    maximize purchasing power

6
The Situation Ever Increasing Small Group
Premiums and Pricing Volatility
  • Many organizations face double-digit increases
    for premiums and fluctuating costs from year to
    year making budgeting for health insurance
    difficult
  • Costs are increasingly shifted to employees or
    benefits are reduced to cut costs
  • According the Kaiser Foundation Healthcare
    premiums for family coverage rose 87 in last 6
    years
  • Average premium increase was 7.7 in 2006
  • 8.8 for small firms
  • 7 for large firms
  • 8.7 for fully-insured
  • 6.8 for self-funded
  • 2006 average cost (PEPY) per employee per year
    8,447
  • MCCG Study average cost PEPY 11,288
  • 5 year forecast (2012) assuming trend of 11.9
  • average cost PEPY 19,805
  • Kaiser Foundation Milliman Study
    PricewaterhouseCoopers

7
Spreading Risk and Maximizing Economies of Scale
Through a Self-Funded Health Insurance Cooperative
  • Cooperatives Have Been Used by Local Governments
    for Years
  • Several local government health insurance
    cooperatives have been in existence for over a
    decade in N. Illinois
  • Other cooperative arrangements such as IRMA and
    McMRMA have been effective in spreading risk and
    containing costs for members
  • Premiums pooled to cover claims up to a specific
    amount example pool covers all claims up to
    100,000 per individual and 1,000,000 aggregate.
    Any claims above these amounts are covered by
    stop loss reinsurance
  • Premiums are determined by the participating
    municipalities each year and are based on three
    factors
  • Community rate
  • Individual organizations risk level
  • Types of plans offered to employees
  • All participants share in fixed costs such as
    administrative fees, network access fees and stop
    loss insurance

8
Spreading Risk and Maximizing Economies of Scale
Through a Self-Funded Health Insurance Cooperative
  • The cooperative is formalized through bylaws,
    which are created and approved by the
    participating municipalities
  • The tighter the rules and the group, the better
    the rates (ie a 3-year minimum for
    participation).
  • Stability is important for long-term success
  • 20 to 25 reserve policy recommended

9
Expected Benefits of a Self-Insured Health
Insurance Cooperative
  • Its Better to be Bigger
  • Larger groups have a larger population to spread
    risk
  • Larger groups have greater leverage in
    negotiating fixed costs such as administration
    and reinsurance expenses
  • Larger employers historically have lower
    increases when compared to small group plans
  • According to American College of Physicians-
    Small employers pay the highest premiums for
    health care coverage and experience the largest
    annual premium increases and their employees pay
    higher deductibles than large employers

10
Expected Benefits of a Self-Insured Health
Insurance Cooperative
  • Municipalities share administrative expenses that
    minimize these costs to individual organizations
  • In an individual fully-insured plan, 22 to 32
    of premiums are embedded administrative fees and
    fixed costs- source Congressional Budget Office
    and the Horton Group
  • Brokers charge at least 3 of premiums in fees-
    source-Blue-Cross / Blue Shield Group Markets
    Producer Agreement Compensation Schedule- January
    1, 2003
  • Large employers pay closer to 12 in fixed costs
    and administrative fees- source American College
    of Physicians- Small Business Pooling
    Arrangements and Association Health Plans 2003

11
Expected Benefits of a Self-Insured Health
Insurance Cooperative
  • Smaller communities have access to services and
    plans otherwise not available to them
  • Greater reporting
  • Bigger discounts
  • Incentives to use wellness and preventative care
    programs to keep claims down, thus keeping
    employees healthier
  • Greater control, oversight and transparency in
    how premium dollars are allocated. Less guessing
    when budgeting for health insurance costs.

12
Estimated Costs for a Health Insurance
Cooperative for McHenry County and Municipalities
  • 2007 Cost estimates provided by the Horton Group
  • Cost Estimates Based on 1700 Employee Lives
  • Rates determined by the three factors of
    community rate, risk level of the individual
    organization and type of plan (HMO, rich PPO or
    moderate PPO)
  • Premium Allocation
  • 74 for Expected Claims
  • 15 for Reserves
  • 11 for Fixed Costs and Administrative Fees

13
Allocation of Premium
14
Estimated Costs for a Health Insurance
Cooperative for McHenry County and Municipalities
  • Cost Estimates Show a 7.81 Decrease in Overall
    Premiums from 2005 to 2007
  • 16,887,259.21 for 2007 versus 18,317,104.92 in
    2005 (1,429,845.71 less than organizations paid
    as a whole in 2005)
  • Savings achieved through maximizing economies of
    scale and shared administrative expenses among a
    large group
  • Long-term savings can be achieved by focusing on
    disease prevention and wellness programs

15
Potential Obstacles
  • Blue Cross / Blue Shield will not lease access to
    their network to cooperatives with organizations
    that have fewer than 151 employees
  • Fear of Change- Employees Resistant to Change
  • How to Deal with Union Contracts
  • Concept may be viewed as a vehicle to permanent
    decreases or zero increases in premium costs,
    which may or may not be true

16
Next Steps
  • March 21, 2007 at 10 am at the
  • Village of Fox River Grove
  • Develop Strategy for Creating the Cooperative
  • Determine Timeline and Steps for Cooperative
  • Gather Demographics
  • Draft Intergovernmental Agreements
  • Create By-Laws
  • Select Providers
  • Launch Program

17
Thank You
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