Published: April 06, 2010
Value-Based Design Programs Improve Employee Health: Survey by Center for Health Value Innovation and Buck Consultants
ST. LOUIS - (BUSINESS WIRE) - A new study confirms that employers believe value-based design (VBD)
improves employee health and productivity. The
Center for Health Value Innovation, the nation's premier information
exchange for value-based design, today announced the results of a
survey, "Value-Based Design 2009," conducted by Buck
Consultants, a global employee benefits and human resources
consulting firm.
The survey is the most comprehensive of its kind in the industry,
studying 100 employers in 16 major industries, reporting on more than 1
million covered lives, including retirees.
VBD uses benefit design and delivery to align incentives for workers,
employers, and providers to improve health and financial outcomes
through behavior change. The survey results validate the Center's
efforts to promote VBD as an effective means to improve total health and
performance across communities.
"This survey is the first one that examines the experience of companies
of all sizes and sectors who had a value-based design in place for two
or more years," says Cyndy Nayer, President and CEO of the Center. "It
validates the work of the Center, and expands the knowledge base of
change and innovation for the market. In particular, this survey
demonstrates increasing focus on employee assistance programs,
depression, and financial counseling, which ties in with our goal to
expand the definition of VBD and link it to total health and
performance."
Michael Jacobs, principal for Buck Consultants and member of the
Center's Board of Directors, adds, "The survey responses prove that
organizations using VBD understand the vital importance of this
approach. Despite the recession - when employers more likely to cut
expenses by changing their benefits - few of the organizations using VBD
changed their benefits structure."
According to the survey respondents who currently have VBD incorporated
into the health program for employees, 79 percent made no changes in
2009. Additionally, more than one half of these companies (56 percent)
anticipate no changes in these benefits for 2010.
Other significant survey results include the use of VB levers to improve
stakeholder engagement:
-
87 percent use for prevention/wellness
-
60 percent use for chronic care management
-
80 percent use for disease management
-
63 percent waive employee cost sharing for yearly screening exam
-
40 percent provide insurance premium incentive for completion of a
Health Risk Assessment (HRA)
-
54 percent cover depression under care management program
-
70 percent reduce/waive co-pay for utilizing the lowest cost
appropriate site of care (e.g., urgent care, convenient care, onsite
services, medical travel)
-
58 percent provide incentives for the use of EAP programs
-
35 percent provide incentives for financial counseling
"With this survey we can now point to hard numbers that back up
everything that we have been communicating regarding the power of VBD to
transform health and the administration of health benefits in this
country," says Nayer, noting that there is still work to be done. "We
see a growing expansion of value-based design, linking the health and
wealth of the individual to the health and wealth of the organization."
Nayer and Jack Mahoney, M.D., chief medical officer of the Center and
former corporate medical director for Pitney Bowes, have spent the last
decade showing the evidence for the widespread adoption of VBD programs.
Their collective experience and expertise, coupled with co-author Jan
Berger, M.D., culminated in the publication of Leveraging
Health (2009). The book uses the experience of
innovators in many organizations to document "suites" of levers, a
metaphor for plan designs and incentives, showing decision makers how to
make informed decisions on benefits and services for better corporate
performance.
Dr. Mahoney lauds the Buck Consultants survey: "It is very gratifying to
see statistics confirm something we have known for years. One common
measurement of improved VBD activity is that 74 percent of survey
respondents indicate that employees are now getting preventative exams
and annual screenings. We see this as a tipping point and envision
landmark changes ahead as more employers embrace VBD to drive change by
improving the health and productivity of their workforce."
To see full results from the "Value-Based Design 2009 - Survey Report
January 2010" go to: http://www.vbhealth.org/wp-content/uploads/CHVI-BUCK-VBD-2009-FINAL-Report1.pdf
About The Center for Health Value Innovation
Information Exchange for Value-Based Design
The Center for Health Value Innovation has grown into the nation's
premier organization dedicated to sharing the evidence of improved
health and economic outcomes through value-based designs for sustainable
health and financial improvement.
www.vbhealth.org
About Buck Consultants
Buck Consultants is a leader in human
resource and benefits
consulting with more than 1,500 professionals worldwide. Founded in
1916 to advise clients in establishing and funding some of the nation's
first public and private retirement programs, Buck is an innovator in
the areas of retirement benefits, health and welfare programs, human
capital management, compensation, and employee communication. News and
other information about Buck Consultants are available at www.buckconsultants.com.
Buck is an independent subsidiary of ACS,
A Xerox Company.

CPR for The Center for Health Value Innovation
Alyson Kuritz,
201-641-1911 x51
Akuritz@cpronline.com
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