Hold On to Your Health Care

Hold On to Your Health Care

By Jay Hancock, Kaiser Health News

Can corporations shift workers with high medical costs from the company health plan into online insurance exchanges created by the Affordable Care Act? Some employers are considering it, say benefits consultants.

READ MORE Everything You Know About Fat Is Wrong

“It’s all over the marketplace,” said Todd Yates, a managing partner at Hill, Chesson & Woody, a North Carolina benefits consulting firm. “Employers are inquiring about it and brokers and consultants are advocating for it.”

Patients with preexisting medical conditions like diabetes drive health spending. But those who undergo expensive procedures such as organ transplants are a burden to the company as well. Since most big corporations are self-insured, shifting even one high-cost member out of the company plan could save the employer hundreds of thousands of dollars a year—while increasing the cost of claims absorbed by the marketplace policy by a similar amount.

READ MORE This is the Way You’ll Live Forever

And the health law might not prohibit it, opening a door to potential erosion of employer-based coverage.

“Such an employer-dumping strategy can promote the interests of both employers and employees by shifting health care expenses on to the public at large,” wrote two University of Minnesota law professors in a 2011 paper that basically predicted the present interest.

READ MORE The Truth About Salt

It’s unclear how many companies, if any, have moved sicker workers to exchange coverage, which became available only in January. But even a few high-risk patients could add millions of dollars in costs to those plans. The costs could be passed on to customers in the form of higher premiums and to taxpayers in the form of higher subsidy expense.

The procedure is simple.

READ MORE Patients, Put Down Your Smartphones

The employer shrinks the hospital and doctor network to make the company plan unattractive to those with chronic illness. Or, the employer raises co-payments for drugs needed by the chronically ill, also rendering the plan unattractive and perhaps nudging high-cost workers to examine other options.

At the same time, the employer offers to buy the targeted worker a high-benefit “platinum” plan in the marketplaces. The plan could cost $6,000 or more a year for an individual. But that’s still far less than the $300,000 a year that, say, a hemophilia patient might cost the company.

READ MORE Young Blood May Reverse Aging’s Effects

The employer might also give the worker a raise to buy the policy directly.

The employer saves money. The employee gets better coverage. And the health law’s marketplace plan—required to accept all applicants at a fixed price during open enrollment periods—takes on the cost.

READ MORE YouTube’s Sexy Sleep Whisperers

“The concept sounds to [sic] easy to be true, but the ACA has set up the ability for employers and employees on a voluntary basis to choose a better plan in [the] Individual Marketplace and save a significant amount of money for both!” says promotional material from a company, called Managed Exchange Solutions (MES).

“MES works with [the] reinsurer, insurance carrier and other health management organizations to determine most likely candidates for the program.”

READ MORE One of These 5 Things Will Kill You

Charlotte-based consultant Benefit Controls produced the Managed Exchange Solutions pitch last year but ultimately decided not to offer the strategy to its clients, said Matthew McQuide, a vice president with Benefit Controls.

“Though we believe it’s legal” as long as employees agree to the change, “it’s still gray,” he said. “We just decided it wasn’t something we wanted to promote.”

READ MORE When Antibiotics Don’t Work

Shifting high-risk workers out of employer plans is prohibited for other kinds of taxpayer-supported insurance.

For example, it’s illegal to induce somebody who is working and over 65 to drop company coverage and rely entirely on the government Medicare program for seniors, said Amy Gordon, a benefits lawyer with McDermott Will & Emery. Similarly, employers who dumped high-cost patients into temporary high-risk pools established by the health law are required to repay those workers’ claims to the pools.

READ MORE Do You Suffer From Smartphone Anxiety?

“You would think there would be a similar type of provision under the Affordable Care Act” for plans sold through the marketplace portals, Gordon says. “But there currently is not.”

Moving high-cost workers to a marketplace plan would not trigger penalties under the health law as long as an employer offered an affordable companywide plan with minimum coverage, experts said. (Workers cannot use tax credits to help pay exchange-plan premiums in such a case, either.)

READ MORE ‘Hero’ Stem-Cell Doc's Monstrous Harvest

Half a dozen benefits experts said they were unaware of specific instances of employers shifting high-cost workers to exchange plans. Spokespeople for AIDS United and the Hemophilia Federation of America, both advocating for patients with expensive, chronic conditions, said they didn’t know of any, either.

But employers seem increasingly interested.

READ MORE Warning: This Column Will Offend You

“I have gotten probably about half a dozen questions about it in the last month or so from our offices around the country,” says Edward Fensholt, director of compliance for the Lockton Companies, a large insurance broker and benefits consultant. “They’re passing on questions they’re getting from their customers.”

Such practices could raise concerns about discrimination, said Sabrina Corlette, project director at the Georgetown University Center on Health Insurance Reforms.

READ MORE This Warehouse Is the Future of Farming

They could also cause resentment among employees who didn’t get a similar deal, Fensholt said.

“We just don’t think that’s a good idea,” he said. “That needs to be kind of an under-the-radar deal, and under-the-radar deals never work,” he said. Plus, he added, “it’s bad public policy to push all these risks into the public exchange.”

READ MORE FDA to Ban E-Cigs for Minors

Hill, Chesson & Woody is not recommending it either.

“Anytime you want to have a conversation with an employee in a secretive, one-off manner, that’s never a good idea,” Yates said. “Something smells bad about that.”

READ MORE Hitchhike a Plane—and Survive

Kaiser Health News is an editorially independent program of the Kaiser Family Foundation.

Related from The Daily Beast

Like us on Facebook - Follow us on Twitter - Sign up for The Cheat Sheet Newsletter