PAST-YEAR
CHANGES:
The Hay Group Study on Health Care Plan Design and Cost Trends -
1988 through 1998
Released
April 1999
BENEFIT
DESIGN
Behavioral
healthcare benefit costs in the past year (1997-1998) have decreased
1.5%. The value of behavioral healthcare benefits (in constant 1998
dollars) decreased from $70.96 per covered individual in 1997 to $69.87
in 1998.
Behavioral
health care as a proportion of the total value of employer-provided
health care benefits stabilized, going from 3.1% of the total in
1997 to 3.2% in 1998.
INPATIENT
The
percentage of plans imposing any type of limit on inpatient psychiatric
care increased, from 86% of plans in 1997 to 88% of plans in 1998.
OUTPATIENT
The
percentage of plans imposing an annual visit limit on outpatient care
rose, from 48% of plans in 1997 to 57% of plans in 1998. (One
explanation may be that plan designs have been modified to offset the
costs of compliance with the Mental Health Parity Act, although no supporting
data are yet available.)
There
is a growing trend of providing outpatient psychiatric care with a separate
per visit copayment (done by 39% of plans in 1998, compared to 35%
of plans in 1997) as opposed to providing these benefits under the general
medical plan deductible (done by 35% of plans in 1998, compared to 38%
of plans in 1997).
MUTUAL
OF OMAHA CASE STUDY
Each
year Mutual of Omaha produces a report based on a sample of their group
business and the actual experience of their policy holders. The policies
included represent a mixture of groups with and without managed care
features. Hay has found that the Mutual of Omaha reports reflect national
trends. In their study ("Current Trends in Health Care Costs and Utilization"),
Mutual of Omaha found the following:
Outpatient
psychiatric encounters per 1,000 people were stable, at 285 encounters/1,000
in both 1996 and 1997 in the Mutual of Omaha experience.
The
average charge per outpatient psychiatric encounter (in 1998 dollars)
increased one percent, from $94 in 1996 to $95 in 1997 in the Mutual
of Omaha experience.
Inpatient
admissions per 1,000 people were down 2.8%, from 3.5 admissions/1,000
in 1996 to 3.4 admissions/1,000 in 1997 in the Mutual of Omaha experience.
Average
inpatient length of stay for mental and behavioral disorders was down
5.8%, from 8.5 days in 1996 to 8 days in 1997 in the Mutual of Omaha
experience.
Inpatient
days per 1,000 people for mental and behavioral admissions were down
6.8%, from 29 days/1,000 in 1996 to 27 days/1,000 in 1997 in the
Mutual of Omaha experience.
HISTORIC
CHANGES: