More Workers Have High-Deductible Health Plans
The average annual premiums this year for employer-sponsored health insurance are
That represents an increase of 3 percent over 2013 averages for family premiums, and an increase of 2 percent for single coverage, according to the benefits survey of more than 2,000 large and small firms.
Just last year, family and single coverage premiums rose 4 percent and 5 percent, respectively. In 2010, the average cost of a family plan surged 9.5 percent and premiums for single coverage rose 7.5 percent, according to previous Kaiser surveys.
But while premium increases have been held in check, workers, on average, are paying more out of pocket to use their health plans.
Today, 80 percent of medically insured workers have a general annual deductible for single coverage that must be met before most services are reimbursed by the plan, up from 63 percent five years ago, according to Kaiser.
The average annual deductible this year is
Even workers without a general annual deductible often face other types of cost sharing when they use services, such as copayments or coinsurance for office visits and hospitalizations.
Experts say full implementation of the Affordable Care Act will continue to drive the trend toward high-deductibles in employer-sponsored health plans, which cover just over 60 percent of
Because of the health reform law, many companies have already been forced to offer richer benefits to comply with the law's requirement that 10 "essential health benefits" be included in all of their health plans, regardless of the cost of those benefits.
Next year, the law's employer mandate will require every businesses with 50 or more full-time workers to offer health insurance or pay a tax penalty.
"What other choice do they have?" asks
Inflated insurance costs will likely lead many small employers who do not meet the 50-worker threshold to drop insurance coverage altogether, Nathans said.
"Larger companies with 50 and over (full time workers) have to deal with whatever the pricing and cost increases are for group plans," he said. "But some of the smaller companies are going to seriously consider allowing employees to get coverage on their own through the exchanges."
Nathans was referring to the health insurance marketplaces created by the Affordable Care Act, which over private health coverage for individuals and families with annual incomes up to
This year, more than 1540,000 Ohioans gained coverage through the marketplace, and more than 400,000 newly eligible Ohioans signed up for
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