Title: USU Medical Plan Facts
1USU Medical Plan Facts
- The average number of employees covered under the
plans is 3,411 - The average number of members covered under the
plan is 10,739
2(No Transcript)
3(No Transcript)
4(No Transcript)
5(No Transcript)
6(No Transcript)
7(No Transcript)
8(No Transcript)
9Number of Months in Reserve
10Comparison of USU Plan Payments for Medical Rx
Coverage
11Introduction to Health Plan Options
12Choice
- USU Employee surveys clearly indicated that you
want choices in health plan designs.
13More Input is Needed
- We are seeking input from employees about how you
prefer this choice be delivered. - What type of choice do you want?
- Shall we stay with a traditional health plan, or
move to more of a consumer-driven health plan?
14Possible Areas of Choice
- Deductible Levels
- Copayment Levels
- Coinsurance Levels
- Rx Card Deductible Levels
- Rx Card Copayment/Coinsurance Levels
- Rx Card Copay/Coinsurance Maximums
Choice can be delivered through either
pre-packaged plan options (similar to the current
Blue White programs) or a modular approach.
15Choice within the USU Medical Plans
Choice between a number of preset plans would
give you prepackaged programs from which to
choose. In other words, deductibles,
coinsurance, and copayment levels would be
preset. This is very similar to the current
model of the Blue White plans.
16Choice within the USU Medical Plans
Select the medical plan you wish to have
PLAN A
PLAN B
PLAN C HRA
PLAN D HDHP/HSA
17Choice within the USU Medical Plans
- Under the modular approach, a base plan would
be developed that would have larger deductibles,
coinsurance levels, out-of-pocket maximums, etc.
- From that base plan, you would select from a
variety of pre-determined options. - Example one module would be deductibles. You
could elect to lower your deductible from that
offered under the base plan. - This selection would need to be repeated for each
of the other provisions that are developed as
choices.
18Choice within the USU Medical Plans
COINSURNACE OPTIONS
BASIC PLAN
DEDUCTIBLE OPTIONS
COPAY OPTIONS
19Alphabet Soup of Consumer- Driven Health Plans
HSA
FSA
HDHP
HRA
Traditional
20Confused?
21Definitions
- Here are some definitions to help you understand
the options. - Well specifically discuss
- Who pays into the plan pool?
- How are medical costs covered?
- Is there any leftover possible?
- If so, how is it used?
22- Deductible - The set dollar amount that the
insured member must pay each year before the
insurance plan begins to pay for some or all
covered services. Current Blue Plan has a 150
deductible the White Plan has a 250 deduct per
person. - Copay - The specific dollar amount the insured
member pays directly to the provider at time of
service after deductible. Blue Plan has a 20
copay the White Plan has a 25 copay. - Coinsurance - The percentage of eligible
charges that the insured is responsible for after
any deductible or copay has been met. Blue Plan
has 80 White Plan has a 70.
23- Out-of-Pocket Maximum - The maximum dollar amount
the insured pays each year in coinsurance,
deductibles, and/or copays. Does not include
amounts that exceed the eligible or allowable
amount nor charges for services that are not
covered by the Plan. Blue Plan has a 1,500 OOP
the White Plan has a 2,000 OOP per person. - Lifetime Maximum - The total dollar amount the
Plan will pay for each insured member in his or
her lifetime for all covered services.
2,000,000 under current programs.
24Now, How Do They Work?
25Traditional Health Plan
- The employer pays the majority of the premium and
the employee pays their portion with pre-tax
dollars. - Medical costs are paid according to the design of
the health plan, deductible, co-pay, coinsurance,
OOP max, etc. - A balance may occur if claims are less than
projected, in which case the Plan retains the
balance in a rainy day fund/reserve.
26Traditional Payments
95
5
Premium Pool
Employee
Employer
Insurance (80)
Deductible
Co-pay
Co-insurance (20)
Medical Expenses
27High Deductible Health Plan (HDHP)
- Meant to protect against catastrophic loss
- Must have minimum deductibles for all health care
expenses, including drugs - Typical deductibles
- Self only coverage 1,250
- Family coverage 2,500
- Once deductible is met, still have co-pay or
co-insurance
28Flexible Spending Account (FSA)
- The employee elects to place a portion of pre-tax
wages in the FSA - The FSA is used to offset the employees
out-of-pocket medical expenses that insurance
doesnt cover - A balance may occur if the account is not all
used and by federal law it is the employers.
(Use it, or lose it)
29FSA Payments
95
5
Premium Pool
Employee
Additional Pre-tax Use it or lose it basis
Employer
FSA
Insurance (80)
Deductible
Co-pay
Co-insurance (20)
Medical Expenses
30Health Savings Account (HSA)
- Must be used with HDHPs, and no other insurance
plan available (spouses beware!) - Employer and/or employee pays in, pre-tax and
subject to annual limits - Medical costs can be paid from HSA on a tax free
basis - HSA is the employees. Any balance is rolled
into the next year, and can be taken upon
retirement or termination
31HSA Arrangements
Employer
Premium Pool
Employee
Both employer and employee may contribute
HDHP Insurance Coverage
Employee HSA
Medical Expenses
Deductible, Coinsurance
Other qualified medical expenses
Unspent balance grows and is the employees
32Health Reimbursement Account (HRA)
- Employer contributes to fund, with pre-tax
dollars and owns the account - Funds may be spent only on qualified medical
expenses or to pay for health insurance premiums - Unspent funds may be rolled over from year to
year - If an employee terminates, unused funds may be
accessed via COBRA coverage.
33HRA Arrangements
Employer
Premium Pool
Employee
Only employer may contribute
Insurance Coverage
Employee HRA
Medical Expenses
Deductible, Coinsurance, Copayments
Other qualified medical expenses
Unspent balance grows. It is the employers
34HRA HSA
- With the understanding that the University would
have to significantly increase deductible,
copayment and/or coinsurance levels to implement
an HRA or HSA, how interested would you be in
participating in one of these programs? - Very interested
- Somewhat interested
- Undecided
- Somewhat disinterested
- Very disinterested
35HRA HSA
- If you had a choice, which tax favored program
would be of most interest to you? - HRA
- OR
- HSA
36CHOICE
- Would you prefer to have preset plan designs to
choose from OR have multiple options under a
modular approach to use in building your own
program? - Preset Plan Design
- OR
- Modular Plan Approach