What kind of health insurance does a business provide to its employees?

April 25th, 2009 | by health |
Dica asked:


Describe the measures they take in hopes to contain the cost of health insurance.

ARON
Health - Bookmark and Share Yuor Favorits... These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • Ask
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • LinkedIn
  • Live-MSN
  • MySpace
  • Netscape
  • Squidoo
  • Technorati
  • TwitThis
  • YahooMyWeb
  1. 8 Responses to “What kind of health insurance does a business provide to its employees?”

  2. By beepbeepwentthecar on Apr 26, 2009 | Reply

    BRICE

    This question is really way to vague to answer. Each company has its own way of determining whether they will offer insurance and the plan they offer. There are too many variables to answer this question with specificity.

  3. By chincha on Apr 28, 2009 | Reply

    CHANG

    the best would be the the employer-employee insurance, under the group insurance category

  4. By jim06744 on Apr 29, 2009 | Reply

    ANTWAN

    by shifting more and more of the cost onto the employee. high deductible plans now the rage (HSA) in hope that employees will be smarter consumers. Just another futile attempt to preserve the current system, on the path to single payor

  5. By zippythejessi on May 1, 2009 | Reply

    COLBY

    It really depends. Most businesses want to keep their costs to a minimum, so they look for the least expensive plan – unless employees are to contribute to a more costly one.

  6. By bgsimsrvp on May 3, 2009 | Reply

    ERROL

    Most large companies offer a group comprehensive (HMO)plan, whereby an insurer charges them a discounted rate for a bulk number of employees. The smaller biz pays much higher due to the fact of being denied a large group discount. Deductibles and Co-pays may be increased to offset the insurer’s cost and ultimately the employer’s cost. The last thing both of them want is an employee running to the doctor, to get 7 MRI’s per month for a pesky hang nail. Therefore more costs are placed on the employee. They also may pay an employee a lower salary or wage to account for the cost of insuring that new employee. If an employee could make $50K per year, the employer might only offer to pay this individual $42K gross.

  7. By mbrcatz17 on May 5, 2009 | Reply

    BRYCE

    They market out the benefits every year. That’s it.

    Some business don’t provide ANY health insurance for employees. Some provide access, but the employee pays the cost. Most share the cost of a group policy with an employee, and only government workers or NEA members (aka, public workers) get full health insurance paid by taxpayers.

  8. By Scott t on May 6, 2009 | Reply

    AMBROSE

    There are several ways to keep the cost down but here are a couple. Statistics show that only 25-30% of insured americans meet their deductible in a calender year. So businesses could choose a plan with the highest deductible possible to keep the premium down and then reimburse it’s employees (theoretically 30% of them) for incurred medical expenses, to whatever dollar amount they wish. This is called an HRA.
    Secondly, if the group is fairly young (average age less than 40) they can self fund their prescription coverage through a third party. The premiums charged for prescription drugs are a HUGE moneymaker for health companies (Blue Cross). If you self fund, the employer only pays for prescriptions that are used by the employees not a monthly premium rate from the insurance carrier.
    In the last 2 years here in Michigan, group health rates have increased up to 20% each year (differs from group to group). We use the reimbursement concept with all of our groups (about 50) and the self funded prescriptions with about 15 to keep that annual increase to about 6-8%.
    Hope this helps

  9. By nurse ratchet on May 10, 2009 | Reply

    GUADALUPE

    Scott has the right idea. Buy plans that have high deductibles, but still have office and RX co-pay benefits (first dollar coverage – no deductible). The employer then sometimes agrees to reimburse part of the employee’s deductible if they ever use it. That is the HRA – Health Reimbursement Arrangement.

    I also like to offer dual choice plans. Have the employer sponsor (pay 50 to 100% of the employee’s premium) for a lower cost plan, but offer a richer plan that if the employee wants better coverage, they can “put their money where their mouth is” and buy a richer, more expensive plan.

Sorry, comments for this entry are closed at this time.