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High-Deductible Plans 'Quiet Revolution in Health Insurance' - YouTube
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bjbjLULU JEFFREY BROWN: Next, a growing change
in the way Americans are buying and receiving
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health insurance.
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NewsHour health correspondent Betty Ann Bowser
reports.
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BETTY ANN BOWSER: Dennis Adams is what the
insurance industry calls a young invincible.
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DENNIS ADAMS, professional dancer: I figured
nothing would happen to me.
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When I was 26 or 25, when I got the plan originally,
I had never had surgery, I had never broken
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a bone, I had never been in an ambulance,
I had never been to the hospital.
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BETTY ANN BOWSER: So when the non-profit Oberlin
Dance Company of San Francisco offered a new
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type of health insurance three years ago,
the 27-year-old professional dancer didn't
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think twice.
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He signed up right away.
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It was a high-deductible insurance plan that
traded lower monthly premiums for higher out-of-pocket
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costs to employees.
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In this case, Adams would have to pay $2,500
up front before his health insurance would
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kick in, if he needed it.
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Then, the unthinkable.
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DENNIS ADAMS: I got hurt.
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BETTY ANN BOWSER: During a performance like
this, Adams tore his ACL.
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When he need an MRI to determine how bad the
damage was, the provider demanded the $1,600
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test be paid for up front.
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Adams was stunned, but, even worse, he didn't
have the money.
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Of the growing number of companies that are
going to high-deductible plans, about 23 percent
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of them offer employees some type of rainy-day
option, usually called a health savings account,
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or HSA.
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And even though the dance company is a non-profit
with a tight bottom line, it puts $100 a month
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in each employee's account.
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The 30 people on the plan can also contribute
to it tax-free, and the money rolls over year
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after year and from job to job.
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In the end, workers comp paid for Adams' treatment
because the injury happened on the job.
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But for the young dancer, it was a teachable
moment.
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He went back to a traditional plan with higher
monthly premiums.
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Dr. Drew Altman, president and CEO of the
Kaiser Family Foundation in Palo Alto, calls
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this a reshaping of the insurance market.
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DR.
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DREW ALTMAN, President and CEO, Kaiser Family
Foundation: Well you know, I think we ve been
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so focused on health reform in Washington,
what we have missed is there is a quiet revolution
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happening in health insurance out in the country.
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BETTY ANN BOWSER: According to Kaiser, last
year, 31 percent of workers covered by their
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employers offered this type of insurance,
with a deductible of at least $1,000.
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Enrollment has tripled, up from 10 percent,
in five years.
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DR.
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DREW ALTMAN: They don't have a lot of weapons
to throw at their rising health care costs
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any longer, so they have really no choice
but to go in this direction, especially the
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smaller employers, who are getting hit especially
hard by rising health care costs.
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So, we re seeing this quiet revolution in
what health insurance really is.
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It's changing in the country and it has big
implications for people.
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PHIL LEBHERZ, founder and chairman, LISI:
The logic is that, if you have a higher deductible,
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as a consumer, you're going to pay more attention
to the marketplace and how much people are
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charging you for their services.
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BETTY ANN BOWSER: Phil Lebherz is the founder
and chairman of LISI, an agency that provides
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support for health insurance brokers throughout
California.
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About a third of his employees are on these
types of plans.
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And, Lebherz says, their rise in their popularity
comes down to economics.
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PHIL LEBHERZ: This move to high-deductibles
is really, at the bottom line, an economic
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market adjustment to lowering the cost of
the actual health insurance premium, putting
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some risk, or some emphasis, from a consumer
standpoint, and some interest in people's
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trying to stay healthy, so that it protects
them and protects the company at the same
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time.
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What we're seeing is a change in the financing
of health care, not an erosion of the coverage.
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The coverage is still there.
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In fact, there's more coverage than ever.
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BETTY ANN BOWSER: That's why, in 2009, the
dance company's finance manager, Charlene
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Folcomer, recommended they start offering
a high-deductible plan with lower premiums.
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About a third of the company's 100 full-time
employees opted in.
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CHARLENE FOLCOMER, finance manager, Oberlin
Dance Company: So, it's made a huge savings
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for us.
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The employees that are on it stay with it
because they're getting used to it.
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They have to do what it takes to keep their
health care costs down now.
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BETTY ANN BOWSER: But a new study found people
on these types of plans sometimes put off
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medical care, more often than those in traditional
low-deductible plans.
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The study's lead author is Dr. Alison Galbraith,
a pediatrician at Harvard Medical School.
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DR.
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ALISON GALBRAITH, Harvard Medical School:
What we found was that, in families in high-deductible
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plans, there was a much higher prevalence
of delayed or foregone care due to cost, compared
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to people in the non-deductible plans.
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And an interesting thing was, it was -- there
was the suggestion that actually it wasn't
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necessarily the chronically ill family members
who were delaying care.
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BETTY ANN BOWSER: But, Galbraith added, these
plans can work well for some people.
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DR.
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ALISON GALBRAITH: Ideally, the best person
in a high-deductible plan, well, it's a healthy
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person who doesn't need a lot of care.
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And for those types of people, they're great
plans.
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So that's why some families will want to buy
them, because it may be the only affordable
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option for them.
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BETTY ANN BOWSER: Lauryn Menard, an administrator
for the dance company, is one of those ideal
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candidates for this type of insurance, and
she's happy with it.
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LAURYN MENARD, Oberlin Dance Company: I feel
like I'm getting good coverage for me.
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I'm young, I'm healthy, I'm savvy.
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I know, you know, what my costs are going
to be per month.
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I know those costs.
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I know what my expected medical costs are,
so -- so, I -- and I feel like, if something
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were really worrying me, I could totally go
to a doctor.
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BETTY ANN BOWSER: But even Menard admits she
now sometimes puts off going to the doctor
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to save money.
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LAURYN MENARD: I do get headaches about once
a month, and they can get really bad.
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And I still haven't gone to see a doctor about
it.
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And I don't know.
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I haven't made plans to yet.
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It's like, I'm kind of trying to cheat the
system a little bit, because it's like, if
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I don't go and it's not really serious, then
I'm saving money.
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BETTY ANN BOWSER: With this so-called quiet
revolution already well under way for thousands
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of Americans, Altman is pushing the industry
and the country to take stock.
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DR.
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DREW ALTMAN: We really need to have a national
discussion about whether this is a good thing
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or this is a bad thing.
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Or it may mean -- I think what it really means
is, this is okay for some people if you are
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pretty healthy.
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But we have to worry about what these very
high deductibles, $2,000, $3,000, $4,000,
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$5,000 deductibles, is that really even insurance
coverage?
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BETTY ANN BOWSER: The number of Americans
enrolling in high-deductible plans is expected
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to rise as long as the cost of health premiums
also continue to climb.
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JEFFREY BROWN: Online, you can find our list
of the top 10 things you need to know about
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high-deductible insurance plans.
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Plus, you can submit your questions via Facebook
or Twitter or on our website, and we ll post
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answers from experts next week.
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place JEFFREY BROWN: Next, a growing change
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in the way Americans are buying and receiving
health insurance Normal Microsoft Office Word
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JEFFREY BROWN: Next, a growing change in the
way Americans are buying and receiving health
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