Title: Healthcare Reform, MegaTrends and Healthcare Consumerism
1Healthcare Reform, MegaTrends and Healthcare
Consumerism
Ronald E. Bachman President CEO Healthcare
Visions, Inc. ronbachman_at_healthcarevisions.net 404
-697-7376
2Patient Protection Affordable Care Act
3Four Phases of Health Reform
- Legislation
- Regulation
- Compliance
- Litigation
4Legislation
- Look for follow up legislation, especially if
Dems. Retain control of House Senate. - PPACA may likely require a large technical
corrections bill. - Politicians and special interests can use a
technical corrections bill to pass new provisions
and mandates. - A technical corrections bill could include
entirely new provisions not a part of the
original law. - For example, the public option could return as a
technical correction
5Compliance
- Consultants and lawyers will find expanded needs
for their services. - Insurers will need to determine if they are in
compliance. - Employers not in compliance will be subject to
large penalties and fines. - Self-insured employers will require compliance
audits to assure required essential coverages and
mandates are included. - Each employee contribution will need to be
measured against the government affordability
standard. - Each year will likely produce new regulations and
changes that must meet with compliance standards
or employers will suffer penalties and fines.
6Regulation
- The regulatory process is likely to be a
nightmare of delays, missed deadlines, and
confusing interpretations. - In the bill there are scores of references to
decisions to be made by the Secretary of H.H.S. - Major areas of implementation and coverage
determinations for essential benefits are left
to the discretion of the Secretary. - Lobbyists from every provider and self-interest
group will converge on the bureaucracies to have
their services included through regulation. - Ultimate coverage mandates are likely to go
beyond what employer plans typically consider as
medical/surgical benefits.
7Litigation
- Courts will decide what the language of the laws
2700 pages mean. - New laws require a period of adjustment that can
take decades to sort out the meanings and
conflicts of legal interpretations. - Given the national impact and financial
consequence of any single coverage requirement,
every self-interest group wanting to be included
in the essential benefits package will push
litigation to add or solidify their coverage
demands.
8The Circle of Life
The never ending cycle will then repeat itself,
as new laws will be passed to respond to court
decisions and off it goes again to repeat the
four phases of legislation, regulation,
compliance and litigation.
9Megatrends, and Consumerism
-
- Megatrends represent major movements so
powerful that the direction of change cannot be
stopped. Federal laws can speed up or slow down
megatrend forces. - But, like dammed rivers megatrends will
redirect themselves to achieve the inevitable
result. Healthcare consumerism is such a force.
10Consumerism Megatrend
- Americans who
- bank electronically at ATMs,
- purchase stocks over the internet,
- buy and sell goods through eBay,
- maintain their music with iTunes,
- keep personal videos on Facebook,
- seek employment through LinkedIn, and
- control television programming with Tivo,
- will not accept limits, restrictions, waiting
lines, or other barriers to their health - their
most personal asset.
11You Cant Fight Megatrends
12Healthcare Consumerism
- Healthcare Consumerism is about transforming
a health benefit plan into one that puts economic
purchasing powerand decision-makingin the hands
of participants. - Its about supplying the information and
decision support tools they need, along with
financial incentives, rewards, and other benefits
that encourage personal involvement in altering
health and healthcare purchasing behaviors.
13Healthcare Consumerism
- Healthcare consumerism is
- independent of plan design.
- Healthcare consumerism is a compelling force
because it embraces lowering costs, improving
quality, enhancing choice, and expanding access
by empowering individuals and reinforcing
personal responsibility. - It is the force operating throughout our economy
and is just beginning to be structured into
healthcare and insurance.
14Growth of Account-Based Health Plans
- More than fifty percent (50) of employers
now offer consumer-driven options. In 2010,
nearly 18 million lives will be covered by
consumer-driven plans. -
15The Core of Consumerism
- Personal Responsibility
- Behavioral Change
16The Evolution of Healthcare ConsumerismFuture
Generations of Consumerism
2nd Generation Consumerism Focus
on Behavior Changes
Traditional Plans with ConsumerInformation
1st Generation Consumerism Focus on
Discretionary Spending
4th Generation Consumerism Personalized
Health Healthcare
3rd Generation Consumerism Integrated Health
Performance
Traditional Plans
Behavioral Change and Cost Management
Potential Low Impact ---- ---- ---- ---- ----
---- ---- ---- ---- High Impact
17The Promises of Consumerism
Major Building Blocks of Consumerism
Personal Care Accounts
The Promise of Demand Control Savings
It is the creative development, efficient
delivery, efficacy, and successful integration of
these elements that will prove the success or
failure of consumerism.
Wellness/ Prevention Early Intervention
The Promise of Wellness
Disease and Case Management
The Promise of Health
Information Decision Support
The Promise of Transparency
Incentives Rewards
The Promise of Shared Savings
18American Academy of Actuaries 2009 Non-partisan
CDH Consumerism Studies
- 1st Year Savings The total savings generated
could be as much as 12 percent to 20 percent in
the first year. - All studies showed a drop in costs in the first
year of a CDH plan from -4 percent to -15
percent. A control population of traditional
plans experienced increases of 8 percent to 9
percent. - 2 Year Savings At least two of the studies
indicate trend rates lower than traditional PPO
plans by approximately 3 percent to 5 percent. - If these lower trends can be further validated,
it will represent a substantial cost-reduction
strategy for employers and employees. - Cost Shifting The studies indicated that while
the possibility for employer cost-shifting exists
with CDH plans, (as it does with traditional
plans) most employers are not doing so, and might
even be reducing employee cost-sharing under
certain circumstances.
19AAA Consumerism Study Quality of Care
- Preventive Care All of the studies reviewed
reported a significant increase in preventive
services for CDH participants. - Chronic Care Three of the studies found that CDH
plan participants received recommended care for
chronic conditions at the same or higher level
than traditional (non-CDH) plan participants. - Physician Treatments Two studies reported a
higher incidence of physicians following
evidence-based care protocols. - Care Avoidance All of the studies indicated
that cost savings did not result from avoidance
of inappropriate care and that necessary care was
received in equal or greater degrees relative to
traditional plans.
20Potential Savings from Full Implementation of
ConsumerismAchievement of savings and improved
outcomes is dependent upon both the Type and
Effectiveness of the programs implemented.
Gross Savings as of Total Plan Costs (Programs Applicable to All Members) Gross Savings as of Total Plan Costs (Programs Applicable to All Members) Gross Savings as of Total Plan Costs (Programs Applicable to All Members) Gross Savings as of Total Plan Costs (Programs Applicable to All Members) Gross Savings as of Total Plan Costs (Programs Applicable to All Members) Gross Savings as of Total Plan Costs (Programs Applicable to All Members)
Effective Programs Implemented Traditional plans Traditional plans Traditional plans
Effective Programs Implemented Consumerism Plans Consumerism Plans Consumerism Plans
Effective Programs Implemented Passive Passive 1st Generation 2nd Generation 3rd Gen Future
Basic Basic 2 3 7 10
Expanded Expanded 3-4 5-8 12-15.0 20.0
Complete Complete 4 7 17 25
Comprehensive (Future) Comprehensive (Future) 5 10 20 30
Excludes Carry-over HRAs/HSAs and any added
Administrative Costs of Specialized Programs
21PPACA Consumerism
- Under PPACA, financial rewards based health
status are increased from 20 to 30. The
Secretary of Health and Human Services has the
authority to increase that limit to 50. - PPACA still allows unlimited rewards and
incentives for participation and engagement.
22Incentives Rewards
- Rewards can include activities such as
- Participation in a wellness assessment,
- Compliance with a condition management program
(e.g. taking medications, diet, exercise, office
visits), and - Maintenance of good health characteristics (e.g.
blood pressure, cholesterol, nicotine use, body
mass index) using bio-metrics.
23The Evolution of Encouraging Personal
Responsibility
- Plan Design
- Education
- Incentives Rewards
- Participation
- Engagement
- Compliance
- Outcomes
- Health Status
24The Future of Healthcare Consumerism - Post PPACA
- The employer world has moved to next generation
healthcare consumerism with member engagement,
rewarding healthy behaviors, and promoting
personal responsibility. - Plans are now focusing on rewards and incentives.
- Health Incentive Accounts (HIAs) are a special
form of HRA that builds value only from rewards
and incentives. - There are many other special use HRAs that may
become the channels for healthcare consumerism.
25The Future
- Government and the movement to a political nanny
state is a strong force in and of itself. - Cynics will point to increasing demands for
federal support and government dependency by
large parts of our population. - That may be a current political direction, but
growing welfare and expanding entitlements is not
a financially sustainable path and therefore
cannot be a megatrend. - The future is not the opiate of government
welfare, but the citizen empowerment of
Healthcare Consumerism.
26 2nd Generation Consumerism Focus
on Behavior Changes
The Future of Healthcare Consumerism
4th Generation Consumerism
Personalized Health Healthcare
1st Generation Consumerism Focus on
Discretionary Spending
3rd Generation Consumerism Integrated Health
Performance
Personal Care Accounts
Initial Account Only Activity Compliance Rewards Indiv. Group Corporate Metric Rewards Specialized Accts, Matching HRAs, Expanded QME
100 Basic Preventive Care Web-based behavior change support programs Worksite wellness, safety, stress error reduction Genomics, predictive modeling push technology
Information, health coach Compliance Awards, disease specific allowances Population Mgmt, Integrated Hlth Mgmt, Integrated Back-to-Work Wireless cyber support, cultural DM, Holistic care
Passive Info Discretionary Expenses Personal health mgmt, info with incentives to access Health performance info, integrated health work data Arrive in time info, info therapy, social networks
Cash, tickets, Trinkets Health Incentive Accounts, activity based incentives Non-health corporate metric driven incentives Personal dev. plan incentives, health status related
Wellness/Prevention Early Intervention
Disease and Case Management
Information Decision Support
Incentives Rewards
27Healthcare Consumerism
- The right strategy for employers wanting to
protect their - Human Capital
- with or without the influence and requirements of
national health reform under PPACA.
28Navigating Health Reform
- It is difficult to absorb the full implications
of the health reform bill. Each week new
regulations are being produced by the DOL, HHS,
and IRS. - With so much happening so fast how can employers,
insurance agents, consultants, lawyers, or
insurance companies make rational choices and be
legally compliant? - CDHC Health Reform Navigator
- CDHC Preventive Care Navigator at
- www.cdhchealthreformnavigator.net