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Barton Margoshes, MD Chief Medical Officer CIGNA Group Insurance. Primary Challenges Facing Employers Today. Rising medical and disability costs Workforce demographics Productivity pressure. Rising Medical Costs. Factors fueling rising costs include: Rapidly rising hospital unit costs
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Barton Margoshes, MDChief Medical OfficerCIGNA Group Insurance
Primary Challenges Facing Employers Today • Rising medical and disability costs • Workforce demographics • Productivity pressure
Rising Medical Costs • Factors fueling rising costs include: • Rapidly rising hospital unit costs • Inefficient and ineffective care delivery • Prescription drug cost increases • Increasing consumer demand • Aging population Health care as a % of GDP Employee contributions Source: John Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Aging Workforce • In 2010, 51% of labor force will be over 40 • US Census Bureau • In 2003, Americans aged 55 and older made up approximately 12% of the workforce - the highest percentage ever recorded • Bureau of Labor Statistics • Aging labor force is expected to cause 37% increase in incidence of disability • JHA Factbook 2001
Individuals Receiving LTD Increased 62% from 1992-2002 Source: Department of Labor
Chronic Conditions • The five illnesses where costs increased the most were heart disease, asthma, mental disorders, cancer andhypertension • Health Affairs 8/04 • “The highest rate of increase in medical and disability claims costs is among 30 to 39 year olds, and both are due to obesity.” • Helen Darling, president of the National Group on Health, a Washington, D.C. consortium of 208 large employers
Risk factors studied: Age High blood pressure High cholesterol Diabetes Family history of heart disease Obesity Tobacco use Lack of exercise The Aging Workforce & Lifestyle Health Risks Correlate with Short Term Disability Source: Wayne Burton, M.D., IHPM North American Summit Meeting 2000
Mental Health Costs • Mental stress/depression claims are the fastest growing type of disability claim • Mercer/Marsh 2003 Time Off and Absence Survey • Depressed workers lose about 5.6 hours of productive time on the job each week, compared with an average of 1.5 hours for non-depressed workers • June 2003 issue, Journal of the American Medical Association • 40% of disabilities have a behavioral component • Managed Behavioral Health News 1998
The Impact of Lost Productivity • Average $6,000 Per Employee Per Year • Averages 15% Of Payroll Employer Costs of Lost (% of Payroll) Direct Indirect Total AON 4-6% 8-12% 12-18% Towers Perrin 8-12% 4-6% 12-18% Watson Wyatt 6.1% 2-4x direct costs 12-30% Mercer 4.4% .5-4x direct costs 7-22% Direct Premium Costs – Only 1-2% of payroll
Impact of Disease on Presenteeism • Percent of patients with allergies meeting performance standard Studies have shown similar effect of disease on presenteeism for depression, osteoarthritis, migraine, diabetes, reflux disease. Source: Burton et al, JOEM 2001 vol. 43 (1) l
Old Paradigm How We Used to Weigh STD and Medical Costs Total Cost
New Paradigm Weighing the Total Cost Total Cost
Integrated Health & Productivity Management Model • Holistic approach to optimize a company’s human capital – investment in an employer’s people • Addresses presenteeism, lost time, and employee health to lower costs and increase productivity • Health related systems involved include: • Healthcare • Incidental absence & FMLA • Short and long term disability • Behavioral health • Pharmacy • Wellness and disease management • Workers’ compensation
Health & Productivity Management • Non Health Related Systems involved include: • Corporate Culture • Policies and Procedures • Benefit plan designs • Alignment of incentives • Training and human resources • Employee communication • Data Integration
CIGNA’s Disability & Healthcare Connect • A comprehensive and integrated approach for controlling quality and cost outcomes of a disability event • Key components include: • Proactive pre-disability outreach • Coordinated disability and medical case management • Referral to disease management services • EAP assessment and referral • Common philosophy, linked processes and technology
Key Study Findings • Short term disability (STD) durations and return to work percentages are consistently better for claimants having both CIGNA Disability and CIGNA HealthCare • 20% of employees were responsible for 91% of employee medical costs • Employees on short term disability represented only 5% of employees, but were responsible for 35% of employee medical costs • Behavioral health conditions associated with a medically related disability result in poorer outcomes (durations 28% longer; incidence rate 7% greater)
Key Study Findings (continued) • Most of the top cost drivers are the same for both disability and medical • Disability claimants with chronic conditions experience longer durations whether or not the disability was primarily due to the chronic condition • Employees engaged in WellAware’s (disease management) Cardiovascular Disease and Low Back Pain programs experience shorter disability durations & lower incidence of short term disability
Proven Results Solutions that Address Both Medical and Disability Cost Drivers Have a Greater Impact 20% Claimants with both a CIGNA STD and a CIGNA HealthCare claim have: 15% 10% 5% 0% 12%Shorter STD Durations 6%Higher Return to Work Rates
Disease Management Reduces Both Medical and Disability Costs Disease Management
Keep the Healthy Healthy and Improve the Health Status of the High Utilizers Average Medical & Disability Costs for Employees
Summary • Healthcare and disability costs will continue to escalate due to demographic trends • Aging, chronic diseases, and mental health are inter-related and will have an adverse effect on employers profitability and competitive advantage • Employers need to consider the total cost of care (healthcare + disability + lost productivity) • Investing in an employer’s human capital through wellness, disease management, quality healthcare, and integrated disability makes business sense