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Fredericks Benefits
Announces Nation’s Largest Annual Health Plan Survey
The 2007 UBA Health
Plan Survey
United Benefit
Advisors: Annual Benchmark Survey Shows Average Annual
Health Plan Cost is $6,881 Per Employee; Largest Percentage
of CDHP Adopters Comes from Employers with 25-100 Employees
INDIANAPOLIS, IN, August 28, 2007/PRNewswire/ -- United
Benefit Advisors (UBA), (http://benefits.com), an alliance
of 142 of the nation's premier independent benefit advisory
firms, today released the results of its third annual
employer-sponsored health plan benchmark survey.
With responses from 16,485 health plans sponsored by 11,723
employers nationwide who employ nearly 1.9 million people
(approximately 4.5 million total lives), the 2007 UBA Health
Plan Survey is the nation’s largest and most comprehensive
survey of plan design and plan costs.
“With a growth rate of approximately 20% over last year’s
previously unprecedented number of respondents, the report
defines benchmarks for a greater number of specific
industries, regions, and employee size categories than have
been available previously,” says Bill Stafford, UBA’s Vice
President, Member Services. “The results will be especially
valuable to employers in evaluating the effectiveness of
their current plans and to knowledgeably make future
adjustments while keeping their benefits both competitive
and cost-effective.”
The survey report provides vital benchmark statistics on
hundreds of health plan factors, including detailed
enrollment, plan design, plan cost, employee premium
cost-sharing, prescription drug, retiree plan, and flexible
spending account norms.
Among the survey’s numerous findings:
• The average annual health plan cost per employee is $6,881
(medical only coverage), with an average employee cost of
$3,110 and an average employer cost of $3,771 per employee.
• Average premiums for all plans were $347 for single
coverage and $848 for family (a weighted average of all
non-single coverages).
• 32.7% of all plans required no employee contributions, and
8.3% required no family contributions. Of plans requiring
contributions, employees contributed an average of 26.6% of
premium or $90 for single coverage and 46.8% or $385 for
family coverage.
• Average premiums increased 7.2% for all plans (after any
plan adjustments) versus 8.6% last year.
• Consumer Driven Plans (plans with an HRA or HSA) now
represent 8.8% of all plans offered by employers versus 5.8%
last year; with 6.0% of all covered employees now enrolled
in such plans (notably up from 3.4% last year).
• The average employer contribution to an HRA increased to
$1,138 for single and $2,105 for family, while average
employer contributions to an HSA were $688 single and
$1,089.
• The majority of the increased adoption of Consumer Driven
Plans continues to come from employers with under 1,000
employees, with the highest sub-segment being employers with
25-100 employees.
"With employer health plan information reported for over
3,100 cities from virtually every state in the country,
differences in plan design and plan costs among various
regions and industry groups become quite clear”, says David
LoCascio, UBA’s Co-Founder, “This unique level of detail
enables UBA Member Firms to provide quantifiable benchmarks
to empower their clients to make the most effective
decisions possible regarding their health plans.”
As an example, the survey data confirm that the often
reported average family health plan premium cost difference
for plans in the Northeast (13.8% above the national
average) is largely attributable to those plans having
richer benefits than any other region of the country.
Specifically, 71.0% of plans in the Northeast have no single
deductible, and an amazing 82.1% have no in-network
coinsurance, versus roughly 30% for plans in other regions.
Other important findings include:
• The median single PPO deductible of $500 remained the same
as 2006, as did the in-network and out-of-network
coinsurance at 80% and 60%, respectively.
• Both HMOs and CDHPs have approximately 10% lower annual
costs per employee than the average plan, while POS and FFS
plans have nearly 11% and 50% higher annual costs per
employee than the average plan, respectively.
• 49.2% of covered employees also elect dependent coverage,
with the highest percentages being covered by FFS and CDHC
plans.
• 7.4% of all employers now offer comprehensive,
non-insurance company- based wellness programs, mirroring
the increasing trend toward consumer empowerment in
healthcare.
• 74.9% of all prescription drug plans utilize three copays,
with median copays being $10/$25/$50.
• While 18.4% of plans provide coverage for same-sex
domestic partners, regional differences are pronounced
(53.7% of plans in the West; 22.4% in the Northeast; and an
average of 2.1% in the rest of the country).
• Plan premiums increased approximately 0.6% more for
employers with fewer than 25 employees than for all other
employers.
“The intent of the survey is to provide not only large
employers with effective plan benchmarks, but most
importantly to provide the 98.8% of employer plan sponsors
who have fewer than 1,000 employees with benchmarking data
that is critical in managing their programs effectively”,
says Stafford. “With an increasing number of employers
having operations in multiple locations, a genuinely
national survey of this size and scope is the most effective
way to deliver that information.”

For additional
information about the survey or about Fredericks Benefits,
call 909.792.1070.
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