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Tax Credit Boosts Small Business Health Plan Enrollment

Tax Credit Boosts Small Business Health Plan Enrollment

More small businesses are providing health insurance to their employees in 2011 as a result of the tax credit of up to 35% and 25% for non-profits offered through PPACA starting in 2010. Several insurers have reported significant increases in small group enrollments. Coventry Health Care added 115,000 small group enrollments, representing an 8% increase; and Blue Cross Blue Shield of Kansas City saw a 58% jump, 38% of which had never offered health benefits to employees before.  Click video [vimeo http://vimeo.com/19716548].

Further information can be found at http://www.irs.gov/newsroom/article/0,,id=223666,00.html. In addition, we have a simple work sheet that can determine exactly how much the credit is worth to you.  Importantly, the Tax Credit will increase  to 50% for small businesses by 2014!

Please contact our office for further guidance on your group’s plan.

HSA 2011 Limits

HSA 2011 Limits

The Internal Revenue Service has released the 2011 limits for health savings accounts (HSAs) and for high-deductible health plans (HDHPs), to which HSAs must be linked. The amounts for 2011 are unchanged from 2010.

In Revenue Procedure 2010-22, issued on May 24, 2010, the IRS provides the inflation-adjusted HSA contribution and HDHP minimum deductible and out-of-pocket limits for 2011. Under the cost-of-living adjustment and rounding rules of Internal Revenue Code section 223, the 2011 amounts are unchanged from the amounts for 2010. The 2011 amounts are shown below.

2011 Limits for Health Savings Accounts and High-Deductible Health Plans

HDHP minimum deductible amounts

Individual: $1,200
Family: $2,400

HDHP maximum out-of-pocket amounts

Individual: $5,950
Family: $11,900

HSA statutory contribution amount

Individual: $3,050
Family $6,150

HSA catch-up contributions (age 55 or older)

$1,000

HSA/HDHP Market Growth

HSA holders own the assets in the accounts and can build up substantial sums over time.  Enrollment in HSA-compatible insurance plans has increased to 10 million earlier this year, from 1 million in March 2005, according to, America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP), a trade group.

HSAs were authorized starting in January 2004. Since then, AHIP has conducted a periodic census of health plans participating in the HSA/HDHP market.

Between January 2009 and January 2010, the fastest growing market for HSA/HDHP products was large-group coverage, which rose by 33 percent, followed by small-group coverage, which grew by 22 percent.

30 percent of individuals covered by an HSA plan were in the small group market, 50 percent were in the large-group market, and the       remaining 20 percent were in the individual market.

States with the highest levels of HSA/HDHP enrollment were California, Ohio, Florida, Texas, Illinois and Minnesota

HSA Advantages:

Opportunity to build savings – Unused money stays in your account from year to year and earns tax-free interest. The HSA also gives you an investment opportunity.

Tax-free contributions and earnings – You don’t pay taxes on contributions or earnings.

Tax Free Money allowed for non traditional Medical coverage– As per IRS Publication 502, unused moneys can be used  for dental,vision, lasik eye surgery, acupuncture, yoga, infertility etc.  Popular Examples

Portability – The funds belong to you, so you keep the funds if you change jobs or retire.

Our overall experience with HSAs have been positive  when employer funding is at minimum 50% using either the HSA or an HRA (Health Reimbursement Account-employer keeps unspent money).  Traditional plans trend of higher copays and new in network deductibles has also led to the popularity of an HSA.

For more customized information and how to navigate this please contact us:

Millennium Medical Solutions Corp.

200 Business Park Drive

Armonk, NY 10504

914-207-6161

HSA 2011 Limits

Westchester Medical Center and Empire Blue Cross end contract

The teaching hospital of Valhalla and Empire no longer have a contractual agreement effective 11/1.  This effects the commercial product and not the Medicare  plan – MediBlue.

This comes up on the heels of the rancorous recent dispute between Empire and Stellaris Hospital Systems which was finally resolved after 5 months without a contract.  Disputes like these are becoming industry wide- see Hospital Contract Non-Negotiation.  Unusually, the dispute between Empire and Westchester Medical Center came as a rather surprise without the typical 11th hour press releases by both parties.

Size matters when it comes to these disputes.  Empire is still #1 insurer with close to 5 million members.  While the hospital serves the Westchester community and is a vital resource they do not have the scale as the 4 member hospital like Stellaris Hospital Systems which includes Phelps Memorial, Lawrence Hosp, White Plains Hosp, and Northern Westchester Hosp.

More info on Empire Blue Cross’s position can be reviewed here.  We are awaiting further the hospitals position to share with clients and partners.  For more customized information and how to navigate this please contact us:

Millennium Medical Solutions Corp.

200 Business Park Drive

Armonk, NY 10504

914-207-6161

 

HSA 2011 Limits

Massachusetts Health Care for “U.S.”?

In the last posting I very briefly mentioned how industry consolidations are shaping the future landscape of private health insurance.  I want to briefly discuss some of regulatory costs results of the Massachusetts Health Care Model.

With the new Health Care Reform – PPACA (Patient Protection Affordability Care Act) there is a greater need to cut costs on administration in order to compete.  New guidelines are becoming more and more onerous on insurers.

For example,  a member who opts out of  purchasing insurance coverage and only intends to buy a plan when sick with minimal penalty and no waiting period is a potential time bomb for insurers!  When member drops out of plans when healthy again insurers have no “good years” to count on to save for the “bad years” when one is sick.

The NYS direct non-commercial market is 2 to 3 times as expensive for this very reason.  A member can opt in and out any time.  We are seeing the same results  with the Massachusetts model of which the Reform Act mirrors.  In an article by Washington DC’s  media centrist , Dailey Caller, “Since the bill became law, the state’s total direct health-care spending has increased by a remarkable 52 percent. Medicaid spending has gone from less than $6 billion a year to more the $9 billion. Many consumers have seen double-digit percentage increases in their premiums.” The article goes on to quote a Boston Globe Report that found that in the first two years of the program, the state’s ER costs actually rose by 17 percent. “They said that ER visits would drop by 75 percent, and it hasn’t been even close to that,” said State Treasurer Tim Cahill, who is currently running for governor as an Independent. “It hasn’t changed people’s habits. It hasn’t been successful at getting people to use less expensive alternatives.”

In Massachusetts, people who get subsidized insurance from an exchange are in health plans that pay providers Medicaid rates plus 10 percent.  That’s less than what Medicare pays, and a lot less than the rates paid by private plans.  Since the state did nothing to expand the number of doctors as it cut its uninsured rate in half, people in plans with low reimbursement rates are being pushed to the rear of the waiting lines.

National factors:

  • The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates there will be 32 million newly insured under ObamaCare.
  • Studies by think tanks like Rand and the Urban Institute show that insured people consume twice as much health care as the uninsured.
  • So all other things being equal, 32 million people will suddenly be doubling their use of health care resources.
  • In a state such as Texas, where one out of every four working age adults is currently uninsured, the rationing problem will be monumental.

We already see a small number of Physicians  leaving private and public networks. Several more are contemplating reduced hours and early retirement.  Not sure how this will affect Medical Students but the prospects of reduced reimbursement, higher workload, mounting malpractice insurance costs and a hefty tuition bill cannot be positive.  Will further empowering Physician Assistants and Nurse Practitioners to fill in the gaps be the solution for this shortage?

Small businesses in that state have sought State relief form double digit rate increases. State programs that businesses previously didn’t qualify for have been tested and accepted.  For example,  the Commonwealth Care stipulated that only groups who’s members were uninsured for more than 6 months and employers contributions were less than 33%  could qualify.   But groups who voluntarily terminated their plans were also now being accepted.

Sounds great, public programs are cheaper and easy to  qualify?  The  Catch 22 for the State is that the more the employer insurance system degrades, the higher the cost is going to be for the state in providing subsidies to low income workers.  The affordability of health insurance coverage to small businesses is a critically important component of health reform. With lower profit margins, small businesses have a much more difficult time affording insurance coverage than their larger competitors. As a result, only 59% of businesses with between 2 and 199 employees offered coverage to their employees. Among the smallest employers, those with between 3 and 9 employees, only 45% offered coverage according to Kaiser Family Foundation.

Insurance is simply a tool to finance the underlying cost of health care, so unless spending is brought under control, all state and federal reforms will shift the financial burden from one group to another, but not solve the underlying problem. The challenge moving forward will be to overhaul the delivery system to promote prevention, quality, and results-based care, to encourage healthy lifestyles, and to eliminate waste and fraud in the system.

A healthy stable small business insurance market is a canary in the mines.  From what we’re seeing in Massachusetts the canary is not doing too well.

Read more: http://dailycaller.com/2010/03/23/skyrocketing-massachusetts-health-costs-could-foreshadow-high-price-of-obamacare/#ixzz0yCe9vijY