Large Employer Health Insurance Plans May Cost More Next Year
Posted: Wednesday, August 18, 2010
by Yamileth Medina
VitalOne Health
Although 2011 is still nearly five months away, corporations are planning for the new year long before the ball drops on Times Square.
Employee benefits are playing a key role in their calculations. That is mostly due to the national healthcare reform law passed in March. Several of its provisions go into effect next month, which must then be implemented in their company's health insurance plans the following plan year.
One of the factors driving up health insurance plan costs is the requirement that employees' adult children be allowed to sign up for or remain on their parent's health insurance plan as a dependent. Formerly, most companies cut them off when they were no longer in college, or if they did not attend. Now, they must allow those dependents to stay on until the age of 26, if they are not working for a company that offers health coverage. In precarious economic times that have left millions of twenty-somethings unable to find full-time work with benefits, those costs will add up.
In addition, the mandated removal of caps on annual or lifetime dollar limits for health care is also significant. Over one quarter of the large employers surveyed plan to eliminate the former, while 70 percent are removing overall yearly limits. For the same reason, many employers are also lifting dollar limits that apply specifically towards mental health or substance abuse treatment.
Yamileth Medina is an up and coming expert on Health Insurance and Healthcare Reform. She aims to help people realize that they can find quality health insurance plans right now. Yamileth lives in Miami, FL.
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