Posted on 09/11/2007 8:25:21 AM PDT by Hi Heels
Health insurance premiums rise 6.1 pct. By EMILY FREDRIX, AP Business Writer 1 hour, 52 minutes ago
Health insurance premiums paid by workers and their employers rose an average of 6.1 percent this year, outpacing inflation and pay increases and taking a bigger chunk out of families' budgets, according to a new survey.
Premiums for employer-sponsored health insurance for the average family topped $12,000 with employees picking up about one-fourth of that cost although the increase in premiums slowed for a fourth straight year.
Insurance costs probably will rise again next year, according to the survey released Tuesday by the Kaiser Family Foundation, a health care research organization that annually tracks the cost of health insurance. Many of the more than 3,000 companies surveyed said they planned to make significant changes to their health plans and benefits, and nearly half said they were very or somewhat likely to raise premiums.
This year, premiums reached an average of $12,106 for a family of four, with workers paying, on average, $3,281 of that. Premiums to cover a single person cost $4,479, with employees paying $694. The portions both families and single people pay in premiums has nearly doubled since 2001.
The companies reported that premiums for families increased 6.1 percent, on average. That's the lowest growth rate since 1999, when premiums rose 5.3 percent and cost an average of $2,196 for individuals and $5,791 for families. Health care premiums rose 7.7 percent last year, when individuals paid an average of $4,242 and families paid $11,480.
This year's slowdown doesn't mean much when it outpaces wages, which rose an average of 3.7 percent, and inflation, which went up 2.6 percent, said Drew Altman, the foundation's president and CEO.
Since 2001, the cost of premiums has gone up 78 percent, far outpacing a 19 percent increase in wages and 17 percent jump in inflation.
"It just shows health insurance is becoming increasingly unaffordable for working people and many businesses in our country," he said.
That rising cost, coupled with the fact that it is outpacing inflation and wage growth, is pushing companies and employees to forgo insurance, Altman said. And that's why the number of uninsured Americans continues to rise, he said. The Census Bureau estimates 15.8 percent of Americans were uninsured last year, up from 15.3 percent the year before.
Health insurance companies continue to see higher profits, but premiums keep going up because costs rise each year, said Gary Claxton, vice president of Menlo Park, Calif.-based Kaiser. And much of that is because, through the years, the health care system produces more tests, procedures and products that can treat more people, and all of that costs more, he said.
Some 158 million people have health insurance through their employers. Sixty percent of companies offer health insurance to their employees, about the same as last year but down from 69 percent in 2000.
The larger a business, the greater the chance it offers health insurance. Though premiums may be similar for smaller and larger companies, smaller ones have higher deductibles, Kaiser says, and their administrative costs for plans may be higher because there are fewer employees over which to spread the costs. Nearly all companies with 50 or more employees offer coverage, with firms with more than 200 employees particularly stable over the years. But only 45 percent of firms with three to nine employees offer health care, down from 57 percent in 2000.
It's frustrating to know that premiums keep rising each year, but dropping or reducing coverage is not an option, said Jack Ross Williams, who owns four vehicle emissions testing sites called Smog 'N Go around Elk Grove, Calif.
He said he'd rather keep copays for doctor visits and drugs stable at $20 than switch to a lower-priced plan and skimp on coverage for the dozen employees who get insurance through his company. But that means the employees who enroll in the company's HMO also feel the pinch because they split premiums equally with the company. For September, premiums for single employees ranged from $232.46 to $312.74.
"I guess we're both biting the bullet," Williams said. "My employees that want to keep it, they have to pay more every year. And I absorb half of that cost as well, so we do it jointly."
Many companies, like Williams', are just going to keep on paying and not cancel plans, the Kaiser survey said. Only 3 percent of respondents said they planned to drop coverage next year. Five percent said they planned to limit eligibility, though the survey did not ask them how they would do that.
But more companies are looking at changing benefits, whether by adding lower-cost insurance options or shifting more costs to employees, according to the Kaiser survey and another that was recently released.
Preliminary results of the Mercer Health & Benefits survey of 1,557 employer plans shows more than half of the respondents planned to shift costs to employees through higher premiums, deductibles, copays or out-of-pocket maximums.
The companies said that if they made no changes to their plans from this year, their costs would go up on average 9 percent next year.
The New York-based human resources consulting firm said given those changes, next year's increase to premiums is expected to be 6.7 percent.
Does that include attorneys? ;-)
I have Tri-Care and pay $253 for my entire family. $300 deductable and total of $1000 out of pocket. It’s the best insurance going IMHO.
Or the millions of illegals that somehow are "qualified" to recieve Emergency Room care, the cost of which is recouped in YOUR insurance premiums?
How much will it cost when the income-earners have to pay for the non-income-earners when the Socialized Medical Care is implemented?
"We're going to take from you, for the common good...."
My property taxes have risen 85% in the last 5 years (with no changes or improvements to the property). Can we write a news article about that?
My premium for my daughter and me is $512 a month. And when I had a heart attack a year ago May, they refused to pay the cardiologist stating it “wasn’t an emergency”. Had to appeal and threaten law suit before they would pay what they felt like paying. About a third. Blue Shield Sucketh.
My biggest gripe about socialized medicine... not the huge cost but the loss of personal privacy? How much of privacy can we really expect when the Gov’t decides they need to monitor everything and anything. Might as well implant the chip and schedule the regular drug screening now.
They do every year in Florida at this time
Blue Cross has become the SCUM among insurance companies. They take your money, but turn you down or refuse coverage for just about everything! They stopped paying my daughter’s visit to the endocrinologist for her 6 month check up for diabetes and when the doctor increased her lantis (long term insulin) 10 units a day, we went to refill at the pharmacy and they told us Blue Cross wouldn’t shorten up the days on their payments!
My sister just sent me an email telling me about another firm that was charging 199 dollars a month and included dnetal I signed up. I just hope they pay the epxenses. So it is good by blue cross.
And they are so in bed with government that they practically are government.
Bingo!
The big corporations, and the ruling government elite are all riding in the same limousine.
We were looking at our phone bill last night, they've added on so many taxes and fees onto the bill, we have no idea what the hell any of it is. I swear, they are just pulling these taxes and fees out of thin air.
AT&T bought our local phone company. Bill nearly doubled. Big fun.
First time in my life, I will be starting October 2007 without health insurance. I can’t afford the $1,023.76 premium (me only) per month. I have 7 years 8 months to go before Medicare.
It seems like that is what mine increases a month. Friggin outrageous. The only ones getting rich are the insurance companies , drug companies and their advertisers and of course their lobbyists and our politicians on the take for their cut. The insured, the doctors and the hospitals all in the middle being squeezed and going broke.
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