Another rant on CVS, healthcare, ObamaCare and more
Invading your privacy or promoting good health? That is the question on which the argument
over the new policy of CVS/Caremark involving employee health insurance
turns. The policy is that starting in
May, employees who refuse to take part in a voluntary “wellness screening”
program will pay a $50 per month surcharge to participate in the company’s
health insurance plan.
A few facts first.
The information will not be given to the company itself. A third party vendor will manage the
data.
The program is voluntary.
Employees can choose to get the screenings or they can choose to pay the
surcharge.
Starting May 1, 2014, the CVS/Caremark program will require
employees to be either tobacco-free or to be taking part in the company’s
tobacco-cessation program. But smokers
who refuse to try to quit can avoid penalties if they meet other health
benchmarks.
A survey by the National Business Group on Health showed
that in 2011, 79% of employers offered health assessments at that time, and 76%
of those employers offered incentives for completion.
“ObamaCare” made the “surcharge” legal.
So is this fair?
Absolutely. Studies show that
high blood pressure, obesity, smoking, and other “controllable” conditions add
to the cost of providing health insurance.
Now there are some people who are overweight through no fault of their
own. But they are the exception, rather
than the rule. As someone who has
struggled with weight for more than two decades now, I know it is something I
have a lot of control over.
Is it invasive?
Maybe. But if an employee is
going to use cocaine in their off-hours, as long as it doesn’t influence their
performance on the job, is it their employer’s business? Yes.
Because it involves raising the cost to provide healthcare for that
employee. Cocaine use involves higher
rates of heart disease, lung damage and more health risks. Why should an employer be forced to subsidize
that behavior’s negative effects? The
same can be said of smoking and most cases of obesity.
Like it or not, the cost of health care in this nation is
rising faster than our ability to foot the bill. Unless we find ways to try to control these
costs, eventually they will bankrupt us.
Individually and then as a nation.
Wellness programs are a step in the right direction.
It comes back to my tirades about pre-existing conditions
and the difference between providing insurance against known risks and unknown
risks. An automobile insurer doesn’t
know that you will or won’t have an accident during a specific policy
year. A health insurer knows that if you
have certain pre-existing conditions, you will have expenses for them every
single year. Is it truly fair to force
them to provide coverage for those expenses without factoring in the known risk
into the premium equation? Who is
supposed to bear this cost, if the answer to that question is that it is fair?
The answer is, shared risk.
If everyone is in the risk pool, the risk is spread over a wider
population and the costs go down. I have
an idea. We’ll change Obamacare. People who don’t want to purchase insurance
for themselves by January 1st of next year don’t have to. There will be no financial penalty. But they give up their right to purchase
insurance in the future without pre-existing conditions being factored into the
premium equation. Further, they agree
they will pay a higher level of Medicare premiums when they finally qualify for
the program. So opt-in now, or opt-out
permanently.
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