HSA Turnover Rate?
pattyo
71 Posts
We are looking at going to an HSA. I'm not crazy about it because it looks like the first year will be tough as far as educating employees to any advantages especially because our benefits are excellent as they are. Our president is convinced it's the way to go. Has anyone experienced a higher rate of turnover after instituting an HSA?
Comments
I had researched this HSA thing ever since it came out in 2004. I've been working with our broker to gather information on it, knowing that we would go to it at some point. Our game plan started last year when we introduced the high deductible, low premium plan along with the low deductible , copay, high premium plan. We had about 20% of the enrollees opt for the high deductible plan. These 20% were, of course, low users of the health insurance. The predictable happened. The low deductible, copay plan got used and experienced a very high loss ratio which earned that plan a 30% increase at the renewal. The high deductible plan renewed at the same premium as the year before. We introduced and attached the HSA to it, offerred a company contribution to it and sold it through small group informational meetings. We divided our 90 employees into groups of 5 for the informational meetings and then followed up with the same groups for the enrollment meetings. That's alot of work, but the only way to really communicate a new health insurance concept. For our ESL employees (Bosnian, Russian, and Hmong) we brought in interpreters and worked one on one with them.
As far as turnover, we do not expect any. Conversely, we tout the HSA during our recruitment efforts.
Sorry about the length. I could actually go on for quite a bit longer. Hope this helps.
If you include EDUCATION and additional INCENTIVES it may work in the long term.
The only way to save money in the long-term is to get people to get healthy and use their insurance benefits wisely.
At least if they die it's cheaper.
As I said they will work with LOTS of education. The problem is there is not enough education available. If I want a colonoscopy, can I find out who is the cheapest doctor? I doubt it. If I can it's gonna take a lot of time.
If I find the cheapest doc, are they going to screw it up so I have complications and end up spending three times the money?
IMHO the health system is not currently set up for customers (patients) to be consumers.
One employee does exactly what they should- switch to cheaper medicine. The other stops taking the meds and will eventually go into a diabetic coma and spend tens of thousands.
That's why it is important, as Larry stated, to educate the ee's of the consequences of their actions.
Next thing you know you will be sued by the estate because you made the deductible so high they "couldn't" get the care they needed.
Having an alternative plan for employees to choose from, albiet expensive, is also very helpful. In our case I used the "Cadillac plan" to sell the HSA plan. I urged the employees to look at the cost avoidance of the premium for the expensive plan to the HSA plan and think about using that difference to put into an HSA account. Other considerations were, of course, foreseeable medical expenses. Money put into an HSA account is retrievable. Money put toward premiums is not. Each employee's personal medical situation ended up dictating which plan was best for them.
EDUCATION IS A MUST!
"Consumer driven" really means having an unaffordable high deductible in a health insurance plan for unaffordable health care and services.
HSA's in the short term don't amount to much. Since they are savings plans, the money has to be in it before it can be withdrawn. Managed smartly, they turn into very liquid medical 401(k)plans. That's where the education comes in which, in our case, started a year and a half ago. It has to in order to be successful. With total monthly costs equal to a mortgage, ignorance can become very expensive.Some of our employees have progressed to the point where they are becoming pretty adept at coordinating an FSA with their HSA. Done right, it will save the employee lots of money in the unaffordable, unforgiving arena known as "health care".