Title: CONSUMERDIRECTED HEALTH PLANS
1CONSUMER-DIRECTED HEALTH PLANS
- What Are Consumer-Directed Health Plans?
- What Are the Attractions of Consumer-Directed
Health Plans? Concerns About Consumer-Directed
Plans? - What Does Research Tell Us About
Consumer-Directed Health Plans? - What Does Consumer-Directed Health Care Imply for
Integrated Delivery Systems?
2WHAT ARE CONSUMER-DIRECTED HEALTH PLANS?
- HRA plans
- Spending account funded by the employer with
spending decisions made by employee and unspent
funds rolled-over to next year - 100 preventive care coverage
- Annual deductible (larger than spending account)
and coinsurance - Nationwide provider access without referral
- Care management programs
- Decision support, typically through Internet
3WHAT ARE CONSUMER-DIRECTED HEALTH PLANS?
- Features of HRA vs. HSA Plan Designs
- Contributions
- HRA employer contributes to account
- HSA
- Employer or employee contributes with employee
contribution being tax deductible - Maximum contribution is 2000 for individual and
5,150 for family, but cannot exceed the plan
deductible - To establish an HSA, individuals must have a
health plan with an annual deductible not less
than 1000 for individual coverage and 2000 for
family, with maximum out-of-pocket of
5,000/10,000 - Certain preventive services are covered in full
and not subject to the deductible
4WHAT ARE CONSUMER-DIRECTED HEALTH PLANS?
- Withdrawals
- HRA
- Unspent account dollars can be rolled over to
the next year to be spent only on medical
expenses. Enrollee typically loses unspent
balances if she/he switches plans or employers - HSA
- Enrollee owns the account dollars, and balance
remains under enrollee control if she/he switches
plans or employers - Funds can be withdrawn and spent for non-medical
care items subject to a 10 penalty and income
tax - Withdrawals for medical care are not taxed
5WHAT ARE CONSUMER-DIRECTED HEALTH PLANS?
- Contrasting Features
- Portability and tax treatment makes HSAs the most
tax-favored investment vehicle now available
taxes are not paid on dollars going in or coming
out - HRAs are notional accounts in that employers do
not transfer money to the accounts until needed.
This is a major advantage of HRAs over HSAs for
employers - HSAs may be seen as attractive vehicles for
saving for post-retirement medical care expenses,
although present limits on contributions will
limit usefulness for this purpose - Because employers do not have to contribute to
HSA accounts, HSA plans may appeal to small
employers and individuals
6HOW DO CONSUMER-DIRECTED HEALTH PLANS WORK?
- CDHPs are marketed by virtually all major
insurers many are acquiring start-up companies - Definity (Twin Cities) purchased by United
Health Group (12/04) - Destiny Health (Chicago) owned by South African
firm - Lumenos (Virginia) purchased by Wellpoint
(5/05)
7- Definity is current market leader among CDHPs
- Founded in 1998 based in Minneapolis
- Initial (23 million) and subsequent rounds (64
million) of venture capital funding - Offered to many high profile groups, including
FEHBP - Total enrollment exceeded 500,000 in 2004
- Reported financial break even 4th Q 2003
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11WHAT ARE THE ATTRACTIONS OF CONSUMER-DIRECTED
HEALTH PLANS?
- CDHP attractions for employers
- Alternative for employees dissatisfied with
managed care - Flexibility in benefit design (for HRAs)
- Consistent with employer philosophy of putting
more decision-making responsibility in hands of
employees, along with more information about
choices - For some employers, facilitates transition to a
defined contribution towards health benefits
12WHAT ARE THE ATTRACTIONS OF CONSUMER-DIRECTED
HEALTH PLANS?
- CDHP attractions for employees
- No restriction on access in most designs
- Lower monthly premiums (depending on benefit
design) - Broad provider choice
- Roll-over feature of PCAs
- Easy access to information about care alternatives
13WHAT CONCERNS ARE THERE ABOUT CONSUMER-DIRECTED
HEALTH PLANS?
- CDHPs may attract mainly the young and healthy
- CDHP consumer support tools may not be adequate
for informed decision-making - Consumers may not understand and appropriately
use PCAs - If PCA balances accumulate, consumers will have
first dollar coverage and few incentives to
shop for the best price (bigger issue for HRAs) - CDHPs simply are vehicles for use by employers in
shifting more health care costs to employees
14The Savvy Consumer?
- Financially savvy consumer calculates expected
values for competing plan choices, and selects
CDHP, adequately informed about its features and
limitations - Accesses CDHP website to compare provider price
and quality information when seeking care - Accesses website for disease management advice
and pharmaceutical price data when treating
illness
15The Savvy Consumer? (continued)
- Regularly tracks expenditures and status of
personal care account on the internet, making
wise trade-offs, on margin - Coordinates spending from flexible spending
account and personal care account - Happily rolls forward unused dollars to reduce
potential out-of-pocket liability in next year
16 The Naïve Consumer?
- Lacking understanding of financial structure of
CDHP relative to more traditional plans, makes
uninformed selection of CDHP - Lacking internet access at home, or having strong
existing provider relationship, doesnt use
price/quality date in selecting provider - Is Internet illiterate, so disease management
advice and information on pharmaceutical prices
on CDHP website is not accessed
17 The Naïve Consumer? (continued)
- Unwittingly spends money for services not
reimbursable under personal care account - Exhausts care account without utilizing on-line
account manager to track expenditures - Fails to establish flexible spending account for
uncovered expenses - No funds are left in personal care account at end
of the year unhappily, total out-of-pocket
expenditures are higher than in the past with
less care management or coordination
18WHAT ARE THE BARRIERS TO MARKET PENETRATION BY
CONSUMER-DIRECTED HEALTH PLANS?
- Employer decisions about which health plans to
offer occur once a year, or less frequently,
depending on union contracts - Most employers are hesitant to engage in total
replacement of their health plans options with
unproven CDHPs - Unions typically view CDHPs as benefit
takeaways and oppose them - In their early stages, CDHPs may appeal to a
limited number of adventuresome employees - There is limited empirical evidence regarding
consumer understanding of CDHPs or CDHP
effectiveness
19WHAT DOES RESEARCH TELL US ABOUT
CONSUMER-DIRECTED HEALTH PLANS?
- Number of research studies is very limited given
the early stages of CDHP development - Who chooses CDHPs?
- Our analysis of University of Minnesota employees
found that - Employees were sensitive to out-of-pocket
premiums - The most important factor affecting choice of
CDHP was income. Other important plan features
were - Access to a panel that included a desired
provider - Availability of a national panel of physicians
and hospitals - The personal spending account
- The CDHP was not disproportionately chosen by the
young and the healthy in the first year of CDHP
availability at the University of Minnesota - Analysis of second year enrollment data again
suggests higher income employees are more likely
to choose CDHP plans, but people in poorer health
are less likely - Others have found that CDHPs attract a
disproportionate share of healthy employees - Simulations suggests young and healthy are
potential winners in HSAs (Glied) and HRAs
(McNeill)
20SPENDING AND SERIVCE UTILIZATION IN YEAR PRIOR TO
CDHP OFFERING
- Data from single large employer located in Twin
Cities mean values adjusted for age, gender,
case mix, income, number of lives in contract,
use of flexible spending account - Total Expenditures Per Person (unadjusted in
parentheses) - CDHP 4,396 (3921)
- HMO 5285 (4745)
- PPO 5228 (4671)
- Expenditures Adjusted By Service Type (hospital,
physician, pharmacy) - CDHP 1370, 2094, 935
- HMO 1843, 2381, 1108
- PPO 1779, 2245, 1007
- Note Employees had CDHP choice in 2001. HMO and
PPO enrollees were continuously enrolled in these
options from 2000-2002. CDHP enrollees were
enrolled in CDHP from 2001-2002. Data pertain to
2000.
21WHAT DOES RESEARCH TELL US ABOUT
CONSUMER-DIRECTED HEALTH PLANS?
- How Do Enrollees Experience CDHPs?
- Survey Data from University of Minnesota
- Telephone interviews conducted by University of
Minnesota Human Resources employees in 2003, 2004 - Asked about experience in CDHP and in other plans
in 2002, 2003 - 2002 Survey Highlights
- Chronically ill employees had similar experiences
in the CDHP as did other CDHP enrollees - CDHP enrollee ratings of the plan were similar to
plan ratings of enrollees in other plans - Relatively few (8) CDHP enrollees left the plan
after one year (5 left other plans)
22Study Design (continued)
- 2003 Survey
- Response rates for 1156 sample members
- Definity respondents 563 of 633 (89)
- Other plan respondents 474 of 523 (90)
- Response rate analysis indicates no relation to
demographic characteristics
23 2003 plan options
- Health Partners HMO with direct capitation
contracting at a limited number of group
practices. - Patient Choice A tiered-direct contracting
descendent of Minnesotas Buyers Health Care
Action Group health benefit design experiment. - Definity Health Consumer-Driven Health Plan
- Option 1 1500 ind/3000 family deductible
2500/5000 max - Option 2 2250 ind/5000 family deductible
3000/6000 max - Both options PCA is 750 ind/1500 family
- Preferred One Preferred Provider Organization
24 UPlan Options/Enrollment (2003)
25Consumer Knowledge Regarding Plan Features
(Definity Enrollees)
- Logit Analysis of Two Self-Reported Measures
- In Definity, at the start of the year
prescription drugs are covered 100 - true/false - In Definity, preventive care is covered 100 -
true/false - Both answers correct, coded 1 (291) otherwise,
coded 0 (269) - Descriptive Characteristics, Prior Definity
Enrollee - Findings No Significant Variables at 95 level
- age, age squared, female, salary/wages, contract
type (family), number of dependents, prior health
plan, self-reported chronic illness, self-rated
health (excellent ? poor)
26Definity Enrollee Expectations and Experience
Regarding PCA Account Dollars
- Self-Reported Measures
- Expectations At the beginning of 2003, did you
expect to have dollars left in your personal care
account? - Experience At the end of 2003, did you have any
dollars left in your personal care account?
Experience no yes no 298 31 Expectation ye
s 89 142
27Consumer Expectations About PCA Account Dollars
- Logit Analysis of Expectation
- Descriptive characteristics, past Definity
enrollee - Findings
- Positively related to expected account balance
- Age (non-linear)
- Health Status (better health associated with
expectation of positive account balance) - Negatively related
- Family contract
- Presence of chronic disease
- Statistically significant at the 95 confidence
level
28Consumer Experience With PCA Account Dollars
- Logit Analysis of Experience
- Descriptive characteristics, past Definity
enrollee - Findings
- Positively related to having account balance
- Age (non-linear)
- Health status
- Negatively related
- Presence of chronic illness
- statistically significant at the 95 confidence
level
29HRA Population Expenditure PCA, Donut, and
Catastrophic Patterns
2003 University of Minnesota, RWJ-HCFO Study
Results Preliminary. Do not distribute.
Prevention and distribute throughout, thus
totals will not add.
30Effect of Experience with PCAs on Satisfaction
with CDHP(Definity Enrollees)
- Measure of Health Plan Satisfaction 0-10
response options with 0 worst health plan
possible and 10 best plan possible - Ordinary Least Squares Regression
- Descriptive characteristics
- Previous plan
- Expectations/experience regarding dollars in PCA
- Findings Poor predictive power (R2 .05)
31Effect of Experience with PCAs on Satisfaction
with CDHP
- Findings (continued)
- Positively related to high ranking
- Presence of chronic illness
- Expecting and experiencing positive PCA balance
- Prior Definity enrollee or Choice Plus enrollee
(compared to HP enrollee) - Self-rated health status
- statistically significant at the 95
confidence level
32Summary and Implications of Findings
- Consumers regard PCA accounts as a key design
feature of CDHPs - Consumers who place a high value on these
accounts are more likely to choose a CDHP - Enrollees were reasonably successful in
predicting if they would exhaust their PCA
dollars - Only about half of CDHP enrollees could correctly
assess key features of plan design relating to
use of PCA dollars - Enrollees who predicted, then experienced,
positive account balances assigned higher ratings
to the CDHP
33- How Do CDHPs Affect Health Care Expenditures and
Service Utilization? - Our research focused on continuously enrolled
cohorts of employees in an HMO (POS), a PPO, and
a CDHP for one year prior to CDHP availability
and two years after - We found that
- In adjusted dollars, overall CDHP cost is the
lowest, but only after favorable expenditure
selection - Pharmacy expenditures are lower year-by-year for
CDHP cohort, with difference increasing over time - Hospital admissions and expenditures increased
for CDHP enrollees after enrollment at faster
rate than for other plans
34- Why We Should Be Cautious About Early Research
Findings - The factors influencing selection of the CDHP
will depend importantly on the other options and
their characteristics - Consumer assessment of experience in a CDHP may
depend on previous experience in other health
plans - The satisfaction of CDHP enrollees will depend on
the number of other plan options and their
ability to sort into an option that serves
their needs
35- Why We Should Be Cautious About Early Research
Findings - Estimates of consumer use and consumer and
employer costs in a CDHP depend critically on the
benefit design - Treatment of pharmaceuticals
- Coverage for preventive visits
- Size of the PCA relative to the deductible
- Level at which out-of-pocket limit is set
- Network restrictiveness and provider fee schedule
36WHAT DOES CONSUMER-DIRECTED HEALTH CARE IMPLY FOR
INTEGRATED DELIVERY SYSTEMS?
- If CDHPs achieve significant enrollment growth,
what challenges are they likely to pose for IDSs
in attracting and retaining patients? - More broadly, if consumer-directed health care is
the future, how is the environment for IDSs
likely to change?
37CONTRASTING WORLDS MANAGED HEALTH CARE VS.
CONSUMER-DIRECTED HEALTH CARE
Provide information to facilitate provider
choice (wide open networks) Blended ffs and
P4P payment Financial incentives for consumers
to select high performing providers
Network selection (as narrow as possible)
Provider payment (discounts drive cost savings)
Network management (utilization
review, precertification, etc.)
38CONTRASTING WORLDS MANAGED HEALTH CARE VS.
CONSUMER-DIRECTED HEALTH CARE (cont)
- Role MC CDC
- Employer
- Consumer
-
Structure plan choice (cost drives plan
offerings) Determine contribution (limited
employee cost sharing)
Structure plan choice (fewer plans ability to
support consumerism) Determine
contribution (same contribution across plans
significant consumer cost sharing contribution
increases not tied to medical care cost increases)
Choice of provider Cost-sharing depends on
provider choice Enhanced role in care management
Choice of health plan Submit to system