“Our current healthcare system is a disaster. The insurance companies don’t start paying until the deductibles are paid. The average deductibles can be as high as 1/3 of a patient’s annual income not including the monthly premium that comes out of your paycheck. It’s nuts. How did anyone even think this could work? The deductible numbers in this article are so far off it’s ridiculous. I hear people and doctors alike tell me all the time that their deductibles are $10,000 a year plus,” said Dr. Ronald Klatz, President of the A4M, Sept. 25, 2017.
(HealthDay News) — The number of American workers with high-deductible health insurance plans rose by 3.2 percent in 2016 — reaching 24.8 million, new research reports.
While premium prices rose modestly for people with employer-provided coverage, their deductibles rose 10 percent on average, University of Minnesota researchers found.
“High-deductible health plans are increasingly becoming the norm in commercial insurance, and there is every reason to expect this trend to continue,” said Katherine Hempstead, senior advisor at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The foundation funded the study.
For the study, researchers analyzed national data and found more than 58 million American workers were enrolled in an employer-sponsored insurance plan in 2016.
The average deductible was $1,696 for single plans, a 10.1 percent increase from 2015. The increases averaged $155, the study determined.
Premiums for individual coverage, on the other hand, rose 2 percent ($138) in that time period. However, premiums for individual coverage had already climbed 13 percent from 2012 to 2016, the researchers pointed out.
A high-deductible plan was defined as one with a minimum annual deductible of $1,300 for an individual and $2,600 for a family.
There were significant differences between states. Fourteen states had statistically significant increases in average deductibles for single plans between 2015 and 2016, ranging from $306 to nearly $600. No state had significant declines.
Average deductibles for single plans ranged from a low of $988 in Hawaii to a high of $2,434 in New Hampshire. New Hampshire also had the highest percentage of workers enrolled in high-deductible health plans (69 percent) while Hawaii had the lowest (about 12 percent).
“Deductibles rose considerably faster than premiums, and the share of health care spending made directly by consumers will continue to grow,” Hempstead said in a Robert Wood Johnson news release.