counter customizable free hit
Family Health Premiums reach $13,375 annually in 2009, up 5 percent as inflation fell nearly 1 percent

 

 

 

 

 

 
 


Home
Up
Adult Health Literacy
Aging Doctors
Aging Healthcare Trends
Benefit Costs Jump
CA Senate Meds Reform
California Failure
Campaign for America's Future's
Cancer Care Rationing
Confidence Remains Low
Disclose Medical Mistakes
Confusion over Reform
Deadly Medical Errors
Demystify Doctor Office
Diagnosis Uncertainty
Disparities Remain
Divided on Healthcare
Cost Cuts Favored
Divided We Fall
Docs Need Nudging
Drug Price Impact
Elderly Get Wrong Meds
Emergency Room Report
Emergency Visits Up
Family Health Premiums
Fix Loopholes in HCR
Forgiving Medical Errors
Growing Cost
Guided Care Success
Health Behavior Changes
Health Care Cost Factors
Healthcare Cost Hurdles
Healthcare Costs Rising
Healthcare Issue
Healthcare Poll
Healthcare Polls
Healthcare Reform Agenda
Healthcare Law Support Declines
Healthcare System Checkup
Healthcare Worsens
Health Center Capacity
Healthcare Debated
Healthcare Disparities
Healthcare Non- Literacy Risk
Health Team Talks
HC Disparaties Report
Healthcare Gap Grows
Healthcare Costs Rise
Healthcare Costs Up
Health Literacy Important
Hospital Deaths Drop
Hospital Report Cards
Infection Mortality Risk
Infections Profit Hospitals
Insurance Premiums Double
Life Sustaining Program
Low Healthcare Literacy
Medical Debt
Missouri Healthcare Leaders
More Primary Care Needed
Nation Divided Over Reform
New Benefits Take Effect
New Law Information
New Medical Specialists
No Guarantees
No Usual Doctor
Obama White Paper
Online Health Information
Patient Centered Decisions?
Patient Safety Incidents
Patients Drive Up Costs
Pennnsylvania Grants
Pharmacy Role in Healthcare
Physician Empathy Important
Poll Says Repeal Likely
Potential Cost Savings
Primary Care Crisis
Recession Impact Healthcare
Reform Benefits Boomers
Reform Explalined
Reform Mixed Bag
Reducing Readmissions
Repeal Support Drops
Retiring Nurses, Advocacy
Rising Costs Concern
Senate HELP Stance
Special Care Performance
State Initatives
Struggle to Pay Healthcare Costs
Surgery Deaths Drop
Top Hospitals 2010
Understand Health Insurance
Understanding New Law
Uninsured Costs Up
Uninsured Issue
Universal Heath Care Stances
U.S. System Scorecard
Weekend Admissions Wait
2009 Healthcare Spending Up
2011 Health Care Changes
Too Much Care?
Uncompensated Care Impact

 

 

 

 



Google
 

 

Web TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com
 

AddThis Feed Button   Now, keep up to date with daily feeds of newly posted stories about America's Seniors...click on the box to the left 

Family Health Premiums reach $13,375 annually in 2009, up 5 percent as inflation fell nearly 1 percent

 

Over 10 years, premiums jumped 131 percent, more than three times worker wages and four times general inflation

 Washington, D.C. -- Premiums for employer-sponsored health insurance rose to $13,375 annually for family coverage this year -- with employees on average paying $3,515 and employers paying $9,860, according to the benchmark 2009 Employer Health Benefits Survey released today by the Kaiser Family Foundation and the Health Research & Educational Trust (HRET).

Family premiums rose about 5 percent this year, which is much more than general inflation (which fell 0.7 percent during the same period, mostly due to falling energy prices). Workers wages went up 3.1 percent during the same period.

Since 1999, premiums have gone up a total of 131 percent, far more rapidly than workers’ wages (up 38 percent since 1999) or inflation (up 28 percent since 1999).

For the past few years, the annual rise in premiums has been more moderate than the double-digit growth experienced earlier this decade.

As Congress considers health reforms building on the existing employment-based system, the annual Kaiser/HRET survey provides a detailed picture of private health insurance coverage and costs.

The full report and summary of findings from the annual survey of small and large employers is available online.

Selected findings will also be published today as a Web Exclusive in the journal Health Affairs.

The survey found that 60 percent of firms offer health benefits to any of their workers this year.

 As in the past, the smaller the firm, the less likely it is to offer health benefits -- with fewer than half (46 percent) of the smallest employers (three to nine workers) offering health benefits.

Among those firms offering benefits, 21 percent report they reduced the scope of health benefits or increased cost sharing due to the economic downturn, and 15 percent report they increased the worker’s share of the premium.

"When health care costs continue to rise so much faster than overall inflation in a bad recession, workers and employers really feel the pain. That’s why we are having a health reform debate," Kaiser President and CEO Drew Altman, Ph.D., said.

"Today’s survey results demonstrate the need for comprehensive, meaningful reform," said Maulik S. Joshi, DrPH., president of HRET and senior vice president for research at the American Hospital Association.

"Our nation faces a unique opportunity to achieve reform and build a better health care system that improves care for patients and provides coverage for all at an affordable cost."

The survey reveals that a growing number of workers who are covered by their employer are facing high deductibles in their plans in addition to contributing to the premiums for their coverage.

 In 2009, 22 percent of covered workers must pay at least $1,000 out of pocket annually for single coverage before their plan generally will start to pay a share of their health care bills, up from 18 percent last year and 10 percent in 2006.

The increase in covered workers with high deductibles stems from changes at large employers (200 or more workers), though workers at smaller firms remain significantly more likely to face high deductibles.

Among covered workers at large firms, 13 percent now face deductibles at or above $1,000; at small firms (three to 199 workers), 40 percent face deductibles at or above $1,000 -- including 16 percent with deductibles at or greater than $2,000.

Preferred Provider Organizations continue to dominate the employer market, enrolling six in 10 covered workers.

Health Maintenance Organizations cover 20 percent of workers, with an additional 10 percent in Point-of-Service plans, and 8 percent in consumer-directed plans, which are high-deductible plans that also include a tax-preferred savings options such as a Health Savings Account (HSA) or Health Reimbursement Arrangement (HRA).

When asked about their plans for next year, 21 percent of offering firms say they are "very likely" to raise workers’ premium contribution next year, and 16 percent say they are "very likely" to raise deductibles.

Just 4 percent say they are "very likely" to restrict eligibility for coverage, and 2 percent say they are "very likely" to drop health coverage altogether.

"As in the past, we’re seeing many businesses struggling with ways to curb their health care costs, including offering high-deductible plans for workers, though relatively few expect to drop health benefits altogether," said Kaiser Vice President Gary Claxton, lead author of the study and director of the Foundation’s marketplace research.

Other findings from the survey include:

  • Drug benefits. The vast majority of covered workers face a three- or four-tier system to determine their cost-sharing for drugs. For workers in such plans, the average copayments this year are $10 for first-tier drugs, $27 for second-tier drugs, and $46 for third-tier drugs. Copayments for fourth-tier drugs, which may include costly biological agents and lifestyle drugs, averaged $85.
  • Office visits. Among covered workers with a copayment for in-network physician office visits, the average copayment is $20 for primary care and $28 for specialty physicians -- up slightly from the 2008 averages.
  • Wellness benefits. More than half (58 percent) of employers offering health benefits offer at least one of the following wellness programs: weight loss program, gym membership discounts or on-site exercise facilities, smoking cessation program, personal health coaching, classes in nutrition or healthy living, web-based resources for healthy living, or a wellness newsletter.
  • Health risk assessments. Among firms offering coverage, 16 percent give their employees the option of completing a health risk assessment to help employees identify potential health risks. Within this group, 11 percent offer financial incentives such as lowering the worker’s share of premiums or offering merchandise, gift cards, travel, or cash to their workers. Large firms are more likely than small firms both to offer assessments and to offer financial incentives.
  • Onsite health clinics. Among very large firms (at least 1,000 workers), 20 percent report that they have an on-site health clinic for employees at one or more locations. Of those firms with an on-site health clinic, 79 percent reported that employees can receive treatment for non-work related illness at the clinic.
  • Retiree benefits. This year, 29 percent of large firms (200 or more workers) that offer health coverage also offer retiree health benefits, similar to the 31 percent who did so last year but less than half the 66 percent who did so in 1988.

Now in its 11th year, the survey is a joint project of the Kaiser Family Foundation and the Health Research & Educational Trust.

The survey was conducted between January and May of 2009 and included 3,188 randomly selected, non-federal public and private firms with three or more employees (2,054 of which responded to the full survey and 1,134 of which responded to a single question about offering coverage).

A research team at Kaiser and HRET conducted and analyzed the survey, led by Gary Claxton, vice president and director of the Health Care Marketplace Project at Kaiser, and including researchers at the National Opinion Research Center (NORC) at the University of Chicago (working on the project under contract to HRET).

For more information on the survey methodology, please visit the Survey Design and Methods Section.

The Health Affairs article based on the survey is also available online to subscribers or via the free link at the Kaiser Web site above.

 

 

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

... ..
...
...

 

 

 

 



Home
Up
Aging News
Seniors Commentary
California Report
Caregiving_News.htm
Community/Workplace
Election 2012
'Smart Bombing' Diseases
Fitness,Health
Grandparents
Hispanic Seniors
Medicare News
Prescription Drug News
Resources, Links
Rural Seniors
Resources, links to seniors agencies, groups
Safety & Security
Seniors' Entertainment
Seniors' Finances
Seniors Relationships
Social Security News
The Virtual Family
Travel News
Veterans Tribute
Privacy Statement
Join Our Mailing List
Aging Resources Store
TSN Video News
Rx for American Health
New Page 12

 

 

Copyright 2000-2013 TodaysSeniorsNetwork

 

Contact Us