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Non-Tech : Auric Goldfinger's Short List -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: pilapir who wrote (9634)4/14/2002 12:52:54 AM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 19428
 
Nicht Zehr Gut fur PacifiCare -PHSY I guess their plan to make it up in volume did not work, LOL:

" CalPERS' health costs to rise
Up to 41% leap in HMO fees

Victoria Colliver, Chronicle Staff Writer

Saturday, April 13, 2002

In a preview of mounting health care costs, the
California Public Employees' Retirement System
said it faces HMO price increases of as much as
41.1 percent next year.

Considered a bellwether for health care costs,
CalPERS has received bids from its health plans for
2003 that proposed increases ranging from 15.1
percent to 41.1 percent. The nation's largest public
pension fund provides health insurance to about 1.2
million state employees, dependents and retirees.

CalPERS sets the bar for other purchasers because
of its size. It is among the country's biggest buyers
of health care. The fund also provides an early look
at what employers and consumers might face in rate
increases because it gets bids earlier than other
major purchasers.

"This is not good news for CalPERS. This is not
good news for any other major employers in the
state," said Peter Boland, a health care analyst in
Berkeley, of the bids. "You could probably use
these as a baseline for next year and expect even
higher premiums."

"It's certainly a dangerous omen for all employers
and all consumers," said Walter Zelman, head of the
California Association of Health Plans, which
represents HMOs. "Health care costs are rising far
more sharply than society can tolerate."

CalPERS' board meets next Tuesday, when it could
vote on the proposals. Until then, the pension fund
won't reveal any specifics about the bids.

Last year, the CalPERS board was so upset by the
proposed increases from its 10 plans -- which at
that time ranged from 5 percent to 41 percent --
that it tossed them all out and told the health
maintenance organizations to come back with better
bids. Ultimately, it winnowed the number of plans it
offers to its members to seven and had an overall
2002 increase averaging 6 percent and 13.2
percent for basic HMO coverage.

The fund passed on the increases to its members in
the forms of higher co- payments for doctor visits
and a multitier drug plan that requires people to pay
more for brand-name than generic drugs.

This year, CalPERS hopes to keep the price of its
drug plan and co-payments the same, but it doesn't
think it can try the same hardball tactic of throwing
out the bids.

"Some of them (the plans) have lost money on
CalPERS in recent years," said CalPERS
spokesman Clark McKinley. "It becomes a no-give
situation. The leverage we had last year is not here
this year."

SKYROCKETING DRUG PRICES

The reasons health care costs are rising have been
essentially the same over the past few years:
increasing hospital costs, skyrocketing
pharmaceutical prices driven in part by drug
advertising and the growing effect of pricey
technological advances. At the same time, recently
consolidated hospital networks and large medical
groups have been able to demand higher
reimbursement rates from the insurers.

CalPERS' staff hopes to curb some costs by
recommending that the board keep just five of the
seven plans it currently offers to its members. It
suggests keeping Kaiser along with its three smaller,
regional plans: Health Plan of the Redwoods,
Western Health Advantage and Universal Care.
The staff's proposal recommends dropping two of
the three remaining major plans, which include
Health Net, PacifiCare and Blue Shield.

"The rationale behind this is that (CalPERS) can
save $70 million by consolidating. The other reason
is . . . by having a larger pool and working with
fewer plans we can develop some real care
management programs," said CalPERS spokesman
Clark McKinley. He was referring to preventive
care and disease management programs that aim to
save money by keeping people healthier.

Larry Levitt, vice president with the Kaiser Family
Foundation, a health care research group based in
Menlo Park, questions the tactic of reducing the
number of plans. "At some point as you keep
dropping plans, you're leverage is going to get
worse and worse," he said.

Levitt said CalPERS' bids are "tangible evidence
costs are continuing to rise without any end in sight.
As little leverage as CalPERS thinks it has, other
smaller employers have even less."

SOME COULD LOSE COVERAGE

The fear is that 2003 premium increases will be so
onerous to smaller employers that they will drop
health benefits all together and push more people
into the growing ranks of the uninsured.

Scott Hauge, founder of Small Business Advocates,
a political action committee representing San
Francisco's small businesses, said most small
businesses have managed to avoid dropping health
care by passing along costs to employees.

But Hauge admitted that as the situation worsens,
small business employees will suffer: "If they're
(CalPERS) getting hit, it's 'Katie, bar the doors.' "

Other large employer groups that purchase
insurance directly from insurers are also expected to
be hard hit. The Pacific Business Group on Health,
a purchasing coalition for large employers based in
San Francisco, won't receive its bids until this
summer and declined to comment.

Paul Fronstin, director of the health research
program for the Employee Benefits Research
Institute in Washington, D.C., said solutions won't
come until this country addresses the reasons
behind the cost increases instead of just shifting the
costs to employees.

As for 2003 being worse than 2002, Fronstin said
that's just the beginning. "Wait until 2010 when the
baby boomers hit the fan," he said, referring to the
tide of baby boomers who will put unprecedented
demands on health services as they age. "You ain't
seen nothing yet."

CalPERS' staff proposal to keep costs down

CalPERS's staff hopes to hold down some costs by
cutting two of the seven plans it offers. The
proposal recommends that the CalPERS board
keep the following four programs:

-- Kaiser

-- Health Plan of the Redwoods

-- Western Health Advantage

-- Universal Care

The staff's proposal recommends dropping two of
the three remaining major plans:

-- Health Net

-- PacifiCare


-- Blue Shield



To: pilapir who wrote (9634)4/14/2002 3:17:36 AM
From: pilapir  Read Replies (7) | Respond to of 19428
 
O - GEE, time for another SIP!

;-))