As healthcare costs continue to rise, employers have started to shift
the burden of health care costs onto their employees. Some have even
cut back on employer-paid benefits. The health-care law requires most
people to obtain and most employers to offer major medical coverage with
certain essential benefits. Even so, what workers pay out-of-pocket
through these plans keep rising as employers try to control their own
costs.
A 2015 report revealed how employers are still looking for
ways to reduce expenses by pushing costs onto workers in the form of
increased deductibles, premiums and copayments. By offering supplemental
or voluntary insurance to employees, this can provide financial
protection in the event of a serious accident or illness. Three reasons
why supplemental insurance is essential for employees are:
Healthcare cost increases are outpacing raises
According
to a report, 31 percent of employers increased employees' share of
premium, 30 percent increased employees' copayments, and 21 percent
implemented high-deductible health plans. Those are big expenses hitting
employees' wallets, but salary increases are not keeping up. A recent
Kaiser Family Foundation study found that deductibles have risen six
times faster than workers' earnings since 2010.
Out-of-pocket limits are high, even for higher-paid employees
The
average out-of-pocket expense is approximately $7,000 for individuals
and $14,000 for families, and that is only for covered essential health
benefits. Yet, a whopping 52 percent of employees have less than $1,000
to pay for out-of-pocket expenses associated with an unexpected serious
illness or accident, and 28 percent have less than $500.
Workers tend to choose price over quality, which may mean less coverage than they realize
With
rising costs, it is tempting to choose health insurance based on the
monthly price tag. In fact, 30 percent of employees say monthly premium
is the most important factor when choosing a major medical insurance
plan each year. A lower-cost plan may mean short-term savings, but could
eventually add up to significantly higher out-of-pocket costs.
Employees
need a financial safety net. Benefits received from supplemental
insurance have long served as a way to help protect employees when they
are sick or injured, regardless of their major medical insurance
coverage. Some of these benefits include vision, dental, pet insurance,
short-term disability, accident, critical illness, and hospital
indemnity. Supplemental benefit recipients can use money received from
these products to help pay for their daily living expenses, such as
rent, mortgage payment, groceries, child care, and medical bills during
the time the insured is unable to work.
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