May
21

Distortions and agendas

A while ago I posted on the use of distorted data by folks seeking to promote an agenda. Recently Insurance Newscast arrived on my virtual doorstep with a textbook example under the intriguing headline ” Most Companies Oppose Single-Payer Health Care System, State Coverage Mandates”.
The survey purportedly found that “Most U.S. companies do not support a single-payer health care system or state legislation mandating coverage[italics are mine].”
The press release noted that the number of respondents that did not support “Universal system such as single-payer” was 50%. What exactly does that mean? Did respondents not like universal coverage mandates, or a universal ‘system’, or single payer? Or all three? What is a ‘universal system’ exactly? Given the poor phrasing of the report, the reader is left with no idea what the results mean.
Further complicating matters is the position of the survey’s sponsor, the National Business Group on Health on mandated universal coverage – they endorse it, unequivocally. To wit: “the National Business Group on Health announced today that it would support efforts to require individuals to have health insurance coverage for themselves and their dependent children.” I know, this is an individual rather than employer mandate, but that distinction may well be lost in translation.
The reason for my upset should be obvious; the response to this survey of larger employers, co-sponsored by a widely-respected business group, will find its way into the popular press, to be bandied about by pundits and ‘experts’ while suffering further distortion along the way.
The question itself (which was not provided and not on the sponsors’ websites, neither of which provided access to the detailed survey report) looks to be specifically designed to promote an anti-universal coverage, anti-single payer agenda.
This is neither helpful nor ethical, nor is it consistent with the stated objectives of the NBGH. If business groups and consultancies that promote themselves as objective want to be taken seriously, they need to do a much better job than this.
Note – I am no fan of single-payer, I am a fan of universal coverage, but have no idea what a ‘universal system’ is.


May
20

McCain’s fatal flaw

Something has been bothering me about Sen. McCain’s health reform proposal, but till yesterday I couldn’t put my virtual finger on it. Something just underneath the coverage of the details of the McCain plan’s treatment of tax rates, personal health records, chronic disease prevention, and consumerism.
And much much more important, and in retrospect, very obvious.
McCain’s plan would almost certainly increase the number of uninsured in the US – by a lot.
McCain calls for greatly expanding individual insurance at the expense of the current employer-based system.
Employers would jump at the opportunity to dump their very expensive insurance plans, perhaps increasing employees’ pay and perhaps not. Remember, more and more employers are dropping coverage these days, a trend that would likely accelerate under McCain’s plan. There’s one obvious problem – administrative expense in the individual market is much higher, and one estimate puts the added cost at an additional $20 billion; I believe that is far too modest and the added admin expense will be much higher than $20 billion.
But that problem pales in comparison with the real issue – in general, there is no medical underwriting for larger employer plans (and limited underwriting for smaller groups) – anyone is eligible, and pre-existing conditions are usually covered (albeit with some limitations in some areas for a limited period of time).
That’s not the case in the individual market – most states allow medical underwriting.
The result? Under McCain’s plan, folks with pre-existing medical conditions would not be able to get coverage for those conditions (if they could get coverage at all). McCain’s ‘plan’ will almost certainly lead to many more uninsured Americans, and many of those that could get coverage in the individual market will almost certainly not have coverage for their current, pre-existing medical conditions.
I know, the Senator’s website has some mumbojumbo about how he would work with the states, and encourage this and that, and talk with governors; meaningless words that spin his position well beyond Pluto.
McCain’s’ faith in the ‘market’ as the solution is nothing short of laughable. We know he wouldn’t get coverage in the individual market today due to his pre-existing conditions; somehow he thinks that this would change if the market is further deregulated? Not likely – the states with more regulation happen to be the ones that limit, or prohibit, medical underwriting.
It is painfully obvious that McCain knows precious little about health insurance, or private enterprise for that matter. No profit-seeking entity would ever voluntarily insure someone with MS, or heart disease, or asthma, or Crohn’s disease, or melanoma, or hypertension, or high cholesterol, or any of the other medical conditions that are all too common in the US. At least not at a premium anyone other than a top McCain donor could afford.
And this guy is running for President? What a country.


May
20

You get what you (don’t) pay for

With a case load of 160 lost time claims, how does any workers comp claims adjuster have any time to ‘manage’ any case?
That’s the point Bob Kulbick, CMO at Cypress Care (HSA consulting client) made in a talk last week, a point I’ve been thinking about since that meeting.
The obvious answer is ‘they don’t’. There is no possible way an adjuster can dedicate the time and brain power necessary to effectively manage claims with a case load that high. And that is not an unusual case load – in fact most TPAs keep case loads well above 120. Even that load is excessive – it breaks down to about an hour a month per case.
Yes, an hour a month per case.
I’ll grant that some of those cases are old and there’s little going on – little except continued use of medications, in many cases physical therapy, and the odd surgery to repair an older fix or replace a surgical implant worn out by use or otherwise defective.
That is certainly not the situation with newer claims. Adjusters have to initiate the three point contact (actually four in most cases) within a predetermined time, set up the case, conduct an investigation into causality, establish liability, ensure reports are filed in a timely manner, determine the initial reserve, and coordinate with medical management.
Established cases require ongoing contact with case management, voc rehab, the injured worker, attorney(s) if represented, employer, and likely the injured worker’s family. Medical bills have to be approved, drugs authorized, surgeries and hospital cases ok’ed, voc rehab plans reviewed, and then discussed with management.
This just hits the highlights – there are dozens of other discrete tasks involved in the process of adjusting comp claims, tasks that take time, careful thought, and professional judgment.
All of which are going to be in short supply with a case load of 160 LT cases.
Here’s the message. Employers who buy claims adjusting services on the cheap will get exactly what they bargain for – poor quality from overburdened, frustrated, ineffective adjusters.


May
16

What does the future hold for work comp TPAs?

For some, red ink.
Most workers comp TPAs are struggling. The softening market has pushed many larger employers back to insured programs – for good reason. If a policyholder can buy fully-insured coverage for less than their projected losses plus admin expenses plus reinsurance premiums, most will.
This is particularly true in New York, Florida, and California, states where premiums have/are dropping precipitously. In Florida, the number of self-insured employers has dropped by over half since reforms went into effect.
The decline in California has likely paralleled the other sunshine state. Reports are that TPAs are slashing admin expenses in an effort to hold onto business – actually adding new business is a pipe dream for any TPA not willing to give admin services away.
So how are TPAs surviving? Slashing costs, cutting staff, merging, and creatively raising prices on managed care services. Or, working to educate their customers on the long term benefits of a continuous focus on cost drivers – loss prevention, return to work, network direction, medical management. That’s where a long-term focus on the part of the employer will pay off – at some point the market will harden, and when it does the employer will be on the other side of the negotiating table, pleading with TPAs and insurers to provide comprehensive services at a price they can afford.
Take a long term view. Paying a bit more for services now will earn loyalty when the market hardens. And that investment will more than pay for itself.


May
14

Drug costs in workers comp – and the answer is

I’ve just about completed compiling results of the Fifth Annual Survey of Prescription Drug Management in Workers Comp. While the report won’t be completed for a couple weeks, here are a few factoids that are rather compelling.
Drug trend continues to moderate, with inflation in 2007 coming in at 4.3%. That’s a big improvement over last year’s 6.5%, which was a big improvement over the previous year’s 9.5%…
Generic fills (the percentage of scripts that are filled with generics) looks to be in the high seventy percent range, with generic efficiency around 90% (that’s the percentage of scripts that could be filled with generics that are).
New this year is a question about first fill capture rate, defined as the percentage of initial scripts that are routed through the PBM’s network. This is starting to get attention, with the average respondent rating it just under ‘very important’. That doesn’t mean they have the data – about half of the twenty payers surveyed couldn’t identify their first fill rate. Of those who could, the numbers indicate about one-fifth of initial scripts are in-network.
Many of the survey respondents (primarily large and mid-size carriers, state funds, and TPAs) have a lot more insight into their drug spend, know what the cost drivers are, and the ones with the lowest inflation have all put programs in place to clinically manage drugs.
Thanks to all the folks who set aside time to help with the survey – you know who you are.


May
12

A few facts about Pharmacy Management in Workers Comp

I’m knee deep in my annual survey of pharmacy management in workers’ comp, and if I look at one more column of data I’m going to need a few class 2’s myself.
So in the interest of my sanity, here are a few early findings from the survey.
Inflation looks to be down from last year’s 6.5%, marking the fifth consecutive year of ‘decreases in the rate of increase’. More detail to follow on what’s causing the decline, but preliminary review indicates the focus on utilization is continuing to reduce the volume and type of drugs dispensed. As NCCI has noted, utilization is significantly more important cost driver than price.
Clinical programs are getting better, more targeted, more sophisticated, and more effective. A focus on addressing high cost claimants is almost universal among the best performing payers – this may seem blindingly obvious, but requires one to have data, know what to look for, and be able to develop and implement programs to attack the issue.
I try to use the same questions each year so we can track trends and changes in the industry. But new things, points of interest, and queries come in each year which requires that some old and not-as-interesting-any-more questions have to get dropped to make room for the new stuff.
This year we added questions on generic efficiency and fill rates. While the analysis is not yet complete, and a couple more respondents are going to send their data in, the preliminary figures indicate the average generic fill rate is right around 70%, with generic efficiency (the percentage of scripts that could be filled with generics that are) around 90%.
This is an average – types of business written and managed, jurisdictional nuances, data availability, accuracy, and consistency all make this stat somewhat questionable.
That said, better to start asking then to wait for perfection.
Thanks to Cypress Care for sponsoring the survey for the third consecutive year.


May
9

Shooting yourself in the head

I recently gave a keynote speech to a group of insurance brokers affiliated with the Institute for Work Comp Professionals; the talk focused on cost drivers in WC, with special emphasis on medical costs.
The part of the talk that generated the most discussion was the section on networks, and specifically how most WC networks have completely failed to reduce medical expenses.
My net is insurers are shooting themselves in the head, with a pistol provided by their managed care departments.
PPOs contract with providers to deliver services at a discount. Most PPOs get paid a percentage of the savings that is delivered by that discount, typically 15 to 22 percent of the savings. So, the more the PPO ‘saves’ the more it makes. On the surface, this sounds good: the system rewards the PPO for saving money and does not pay it when it delivers no savings.
However, a closer look reveals that when the PPO vendors win, the payer loses. The ugly head of the Law of Unintended Consequences emerges again.
At the most basic level, health care costs are driven by a relatively simple equation:
Price per Unit x Number of Units = Total Costs
Under a percentage-of-savings arrangement, reducing total cost is ignored in favor of saving money on unit costs. The PPO gets paid for savings on individual bills. Therefore, the more services that are delivered and the more bills generated, the greater the ‘savings’ and the more money the PPO makes.
The system encourages over utilization because it is in the PPO’s best interest financially to have numerous providers generate lots of bills for lots of services. Also, the providers, squeezed by a per-unit fee schedule that is lower than fee schedule/Usual and Customary Rates (UCR), have a perverse incentive to make up for that discount by performing more services.
The industry has been hit, and hit hard, by the Law of Unintended Consequences. Two of the top managed care “fixes” – fee schedules and PPOs with pricing based on percentage of savings, encourage over-utilization, a major cost driver for workers’ compensation.
It’s no wonder that most PPOs like this model, but why would any of their customers?
The simple answer is that managed care departments at many carriers and third party administrators (TPAs) are evaluated on the basis of their network penetration (the percentage of dollars that flow through a network provider) and network savings (on a per-bill basis).Their internal and external customers have bought into the per-unit discount model, and measure the success of their managed care programs on the dollars and/or bills that flow thru the network, and the savings below fee schedule or UCR delivered by the network.
The fact is few carriers, TPAs, or employers have realized that per-bill ‘savings’ is the wrong way to assess a managed care program. And unless senior management changes their evaluation methodology, their managed care departments will have no incentive to change their program to one that actually does reduce total costs.
After my conversation with a hall full of brokers, my bet is more carriers are going to be getting more questions about this.


May
8

The cost of ignorance

Many payers look at ‘medical’ as a line item and nothing more. This myopia, this failure to look deeper, to try to understand what drives medical, is perhaps the most significant shortcoming in the industry.
Many readers will dismiss this criticism, claiming that they are different and smarter, that they know better.
And most will be wrong.
One current example provides compelling evidence of the industry’s ignorance of many things medical. I’ve posted on the pending changes to the Florida fee schedule, namely the move by the Three Member Panel to establish Medicare billed charges as the standard for Usual and Customary for facilities. That’s right, billed charges, not reimbursement. Yet many payers – self insured employers, insurers, and TPAs – are blissfully unaware of the damage this will do.
Here’s why hospital costs are important. According to the WCRI, hospital costs are rapidly accelerating for claims with more than 7 days lost time (which account for 83.5% of all workers’ compensation medical payout).

  • Medical payment for NonHospital providers: up 3.8%
  • All hospital medical payments: up 7.1%
  • Inpatient hospital medical payments: up 12.1%

(Source, Stacy M. Eccelston et. al., The Anatomy of Workers’ Compensation Medical Costs, 6th Edition, 2007, WCRI).
In Florida, where hospital costs are about half of all medical expenses, this is particularly significant. In fact, two studies indicate the Panel’s proposed changes will dramatically increase hospital costs – by over $50 million annually. More troubling, the change will likely have the unintended consequence of shifting the location of care for many patients. With facility reimbursement becoming much more profitable, payers can expect to see many more bills for care delivered in hospitals, outpatient facilities, and ASCs. And they will be paying much more for that care.
Yet payers, in testimony before the Panel, seem to be completely ignorant of the impact of the proposed changes.
Here’s hoping payers wake up from their slumber – and soon. If not, many will have to explain to their clients why they didn’t act to prevent this disaster. Because it is preventable.
(for detailed information on this in the form of an extensive analysis, email infoAThealthstrategyassocDOTcom with Florida Hospital Reimbursement in the subject line)


May
7

Ingenix can’t catch a break

Ingenix has had a tough few months. The latest injury comes in the form of a suit filed by a Connecticut man, seeking class action status based on allegations that the United HealthCare sub engaged in an “alleged conspiracy in which insurance companies calculate their usual, customary and reasonable rates from a flawed and manipulated Ingenix database. The low payments to providers, according to the lawsuit, left Weintraub and other consumers with higher out-of-pocket costs.” (Modern Healthcare)
For the legal folks out there, the full case can be accessed here. (PACER sub req)
The plaintiff, Jeffrey Weintraub, is suing Ingenix, their parent, UnitedHealth Group Inc; sister company Oxford Health Plans, as well as Aetna Inc, Cigna Corp, Empire BlueCross BlueShield, Humana Inc, Group Health Ins Inc, Health Ins Plan of NY and Health Net Inc.
OK, so what does this mean? My sense is this is piling on; since the Cuomo announcement Ingenix has been a highly visible target, and based on the company’s rather lackadaisical approach to defending its methodology in the Davekos case, it looks like the legal sharks smell blood in the water.
But just because it is piling on does not mean these cases are without merit.
I would expect to see more of these suits filed, perhaps in more class-action friendly jurisdictions (Mississippi, for example). I also expect the industry to rally around Ingenix – this is a very, very big deal, and one that has been mishandled so far. Ingenix, and the health payer industry, cannot afford any more mishaps.
Thanks to Fierce Healthcare for the heads’ up.