2013 Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report Arizona Department of Administration Human Resources Division – Benefit Services Janice K. Brewer Governor Brian C. McNeil Director FOREWORD Benefit Options is the program name for the benefits offered to State of Arizona (“State”) employees and retirees by the Arizona Department of Administration (“ADOA”). This report provides a broad overview of the Benefit Options program, and meets the requirements of A.R.S. §38-652 (G) and A.R.S. §38-658 (B). The data shown is presented for the period January 1, 2013 through December 31, 2013. The active and retiree plans were concurrent for this period. For this report, ADOA internally developed a consistent statistical model based on generally accepted actuarial principles and standards, including Milliman Health Cost Guidelines Commercial Rating Structures, July 1, 2012. Any questions relating to the contents of this report should be addressed to: Arizona Department of Administration Human Resources Division 100 N. 15th Avenue, Suite 261 Phoenix, Arizona 85007 Telephone: 602-542-5482 Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 1 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Table of Contents Report Background ......................................................................................................... 4 Executive Summary ........................................................................................................ 5 Health Insurance Trust Fund Summary........................................................................... 6 Medical Plan Enrollment.................................................................................................. 7 Medical Premiums ........................................................................................................... 9 Medical Premium vs. Plan Cost .................................................................................... 10 Expenses for Self-Funded Medical Plans...................................................................... 11 Medical Expenses Associated with Medical Diagnoses ................................................ 12 Hospital Care ............................................................................................................. 13 Emergency Room Visits ............................................................................................ 15 Urgent Care Visits ..................................................................................................... 15 Physician Visits.......................................................................................................... 15 Annual Prescription Use ................................................................................................ 17 Generic and Brand-Name Prescription Use............................................................... 18 Prescription Use by Therapeutic Class ...................................................................... 18 Prescription Use by Type of Drug .............................................................................. 19 Dental Plan Enrollment.................................................................................................. 20 Dental Premiums ........................................................................................................... 21 Dental Premium vs. Plan Cost ...................................................................................... 21 Expenses for Self-funded Dental Plan........................................................................... 22 Wellness........................................................................................................................ 23 Life, Disability, Vision Insurance, and Flexible Spending Accounts Premiums.............. 25 Vendor Performance Standards .................................................................................... 26 Vendor Performance Measures 1: Aetna................................................................... 27 Vendor Performance Measures 2: Cigna................................................................... 28 Vendor Performance Measures 3: UnitedHealthcare ................................................ 28 Vendor Performance Measures 4: AmeriBen ............................................................ 29 Vendor Performance Measures 5: American Health Holding .................................... 29 Vendor Performance Measures 6: MedImpact .......................................................... 29 Vendor Performance Measures 7: Delta Dental ........................................................ 30 Vendor Performance Measures 8: Total Dental Administrators ................................. 30 Vendor Performance Measures 9: ComPsych........................................................... 30 Vendor Performance Measures 10: Avesis ............................................................... 31 Vendor Performance Measures 11: Application Software Inc.................................... 31 Vendor Performance Measures 12: The Hartford ...................................................... 31 Audit Services ............................................................................................................... 32 Appendix ....................................................................................................................... 34 Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 2 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Glossary of Terms ..................................................................................................... 35 Figures and Tables Figure 1: Average Monthly Premium & Plan Cost per Member ................................. 10 Figure 2: Hospital Admissions per 1,000 Members ................................................... 13 Figure 3: Inpatient Average Length of Stay ............................................................... 13 Figure 4: Inpatient Days per 1,000 Members ............................................................ 14 Figure 5: Average Cost per Admission ...................................................................... 14 Figure 6: Active Medical Expense by Place of Service.............................................. 15 Figure 7: Retiree Medical Expense by Place of Service ............................................ 16 Figure 8: Average Number of Prescriptions per Year................................................ 17 Figure 9: Pharmacy Expense per Utilizer per Year ................................................... 17 Figure 10: Average Dental Premiums & Expenses per Member ............................... 22 Table 1: Health Insurance Trust Fund Summary......................................................... 6 Table 2: Average Medical Enrollment by Plan & Network ........................................... 8 Table 3: Active Medical Premiums by Pay Period ....................................................... 9 Table 4: Monthly Retiree Medical Premiums ............................................................... 9 Table 5: Self-funded Expenses by Active, Retiree, & Plan ........................................ 11 Table 6: Self-funded Expenses by Plan for Actives & Retirees ................................. 11 Table 7: Medical Expenses by Diagnosis for Actives & Retirees .............................. 12 Table 8: Total Prescriptions by Tier ........................................................................... 18 Table 9: Pharmacy Top Therapeutic Classes by Plan Paid ...................................... 18 Table 10: Top Ten Drugs by Total Plan Paid ............................................................ 19 Table 11: Average Dental Enrollment by Plan........................................................... 20 Table 12: Active Dental Premiums ............................................................................ 21 Table 13: Retiree Dental Premiums .......................................................................... 21 Table 14: Self-funded Dental Expenses by Active & Retiree..................................... 22 Table 15: PY 2013 Wellness Screenings .................................................................. 23 Table 16: PY 2013 Flu Vaccines ............................................................................... 23 Table 17: PY 2013 Employee Assistance Program Utilization .................................. 24 Table 18: PY 2013 Health Management Courses ..................................................... 24 Table 19: ERE/Benefits Administration Fund Summary ............................................ 25 Table 20: Audit Services Summary ........................................................................... 32 Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 3 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Report Background This document reports the financial status of the Employee Health Insurance Trust Fund pursuant to A.R.S. §38-652 (G), which reads: The Department of Administration shall annually report the financial status of the trust account to officers and employees who have paid premiums under one of the insurance plans from which monies were received for deposit in the trust account since the inception of the health and accident coverage program or since submission of the last such report, whichever is later. The Benefit Options program is accounted for in two different funds. The Special Employee Health Fund, also known as Fund 3015 or the Health Insurance Trust Fund (HITF) encompasses the medical and dental programs and the appropriated expenditures for ADOA, Human Resources Division, Benefit Services operations. The ERE/Benefits Administration Fund, or Fund 3035, is primarily a “pass through” fund for other benefits including vision, life, and disability insurance, and flexible spending accounts. The benefits offered through the program fall into one of two types — self-funded or fully-insured. For 2013, the health benefit plan and the dental PPO plan were selffunded, whereas the dental HMO plan, vision plan, life, and disability insurance plans were fully-insured. The State’s self-funded medical plan began on October 1, 2004, and consists of both integrated and nonintegrated options for the medical plan with a carved-out pharmacy plan. The integrated option combines the functions of claims review and payment, network access, and medical management, including utilization management, case management and disease management. The non-integrated option is similar, except the medical management function is carved out to a separate contracted vendor. Plan Year (PY) 2013 was the first year of the self-funded dental PPO plan. Schedules of premiums received and accounted for in Fund 3015, distribution by enrollment, incurred and paid medical/drug claims, and expenses related to the medical and dental plans are included within this Annual Report. Also included is a summary of premiums collected and paid for life insurance, disability insurance, vision insurance, and flexible spending accounts for Fund 3035. All data provided herein is for PY 2013 (January 1, 2013 – December 31, 2013). Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 4 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Executive Summary During PY 2013, ADOA offered a comprehensive insurance package through Benefit Options to over 128,000 members consisting of active state and university employees, retirees, and their qualified dependents. The benefits offered in the package include medical, pharmaceutical, dental, flexible spending, vision, wellness, life, and disability insurance. Based on the 2013 contribution strategy, the sum of health and dental premiums collected was $810 million with total plan expenses of $804 million, resulting in a net operational gain of $6 million. Health Plan • The average plan cost to insure each member was $5,302  Average active member cost was $5,033  Average retiree cost was $8,773 • The medical claims expense was $505 million of total health plan costs for 2013  The leading diagnosis category by cost was the musculoskeletal system o Just over 13% of the total medical claims cost  Claims showed members are seeking care from physicians or specialists for the majority of their medical needs, indicating appropriate care o 170 emergency room visits per 1,000 members o 221 urgent care visits per 1,000 members o 4,515 physician visits per 1,000 members • The pharmacy claims expense was $118 million of total health plan cost for 2013  The leading therapeutic drug class by cost was diabetes o 11% of the total pharmacy claims cost  1.4 million prescriptions were filled during PY 2013 o Retirees filled an average of 31 prescriptions per year o Active members averaged 10 per year Wellness Program • Administered over 12,600 flu vaccines through 635 worksite or public events • Administered over 6,400 screenings through 150 worksite events  590 referrals to physicians for various health issues Performance Measures Financial guarantees are in place to manage the performance of the contracted vendors. Most vendors met the majority or all of the agreed-upon performance measures. However, penalties in excess of $301,000 were collected in 2013 from a few vendors failing to meet agreed upon PY 2012 performance targets in areas such as customer service, claims processing, and disease management clinical improvements. Review The PY 2013 ratio of expenses to premiums of 99% indicates that the ADOA effectively controlled the rise in health care costs through quality benefit design, administrative oversight, strategic planning, auditing, and effective contract management. Detailed evidence of ADOA’s accomplishments can be reviewed herein. Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 5 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Health Insurance Trust Fund Summary Table 1 is a cash statement of receipts received and expenses paid during 2013 for PY 2013 and prior plan years. ADOA Health Plan is the selffunded medical program and includes Aetna, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arizona administered by AmeriBen, Cigna, and UnitedHealthcare networks. State and university employees and retirees choose coverage from one of the self-funded networks. BCBS (NAU) is a fully-insured option available only to NAU employees and NAU retirees. The Medicare Part D Retiree Drug Subsidy is available to employers who provide a qualified pharmacy plan to Medicare-eligible retirees. The Early Retiree Reinsurance Program was instituted by the Affordable Care Act as an incentive for employers to continue health coverage for early retirees. The 2013 expense is reimbursement to the federal government for an overpayment of subsidies received in a prior year. Health Insurance Trust Fund Summary Prior Balance December 31, 2012 PY 2013 $276,902,422.88 Revenues ADOA Health Plan BCBS (NAU) ADOA Dental Plan PrePaid Dental Plan Other Revenue Total Revenues 735,881,822.01 33,699,732.27 36,900,448.89 3,501,446.15 163,733.63 $810,147,182.95 Expenditures Administrative Fees Medical Claims Drug Claims Dental Claims Medicare Part D Retiree Drug Subsidy Early Retiree Reinsurance Program BCBS (NAU) Premiums Dental Premiums Appropriated Expenses Fund Transfers Out^ Federal Participation Reimbursement Total Expenditures 26,524,977.54 504,773,882.95 119,048,078.11 33,437,510.58 (1,982,399.22) 4,559.23 32,340,627.85 6,700,748.82 4,403,539.75 73,496,000.00 5,104,143.00 $803,851,668.61 Fund Balance December 31, 2013 $283,197,937.22 Reserves IBNR Liability (Medical & Dental) Contingency Reserve (Medical & Dental) Total Reserves 104,400,000.00 104,400,000.00 $208,800,000.00 Reserves are monies set aside Unrestricted Balance December 31,2013 $ 74,397,937.22 for the purpose of paying claims Table 1: Health Insurance Trust Fund Summary that have been incurred but not ^Interfund transfers from HITF to other State operating reported (IBNR) and for a funds. Future transfers include $53.9 million pursuant to contingency reserve to cover any Laws 2014, Chapter 18, Sec. 139 (HB2703 2014-2015; general appropriations) for fiscal year 2015. insufficiencies that may develop, such as actual medical trend exceeding assumed medical trend in rate setting, shifts in plan membership, unexpected catastrophic claims, and changes in provider reimbursement rates that may occur in a given plan year. Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 6 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Medical Plan Enrollment The ADOA Benefit Options group medical plan is available to the following: • Eligible State employees and university staff, officers, and elected officials; • State retirees receiving pension benefits through any of the State retirement systems; • State employees or university staff accepted for long-term disability benefits; • Employees of participating political subdivisions; and • State employees or university staff eligible for COBRA benefits. The three types of medical plans offered to eligible participants are the Exclusive Provider Organization (EPO), the Preferred Provider Organization (PPO), and the Health Savings Account Option (HSAO). The EPO Plan If a member chooses the EPO plan, services must be obtained from a network provider. Out-of-network services are only covered in emergency situations. Under the EPO plan, the employee pays the monthly premium and any required copay at the time of service. Members selecting the EPO plan choose from four networks: Aetna, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arizona administered by AmeriBen*, Cigna, or UnitedHealthcare. The PPO Plan If a member chooses the PPO plan, services can be provided in-network or out-ofnetwork, but there are higher costs for out-of-network services. Additionally, there is an in-network and out-of-network deductible that must be met. Under the PPO plan, the employee will pay the monthly premium and any required copay or coinsurance (percent of the cost) at the time of service. Members selecting the PPO plan choose from Aetna, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arizona administered by AmeriBen*, or UnitedHealthcare. The HSAO Plan The HSAO plan is a high deductible health plan only available to active employees through the Aetna network. If an employee enrolls in the HSAO, the employee is eligible to open a Health Savings Account (HSA) which is a special type of account that allows tax-free contributions, earnings, and healthcare-related withdrawals. If the employee opens the Aetna associated qualifying HSA, the State makes a bi-weekly deposit to the account. When enrolled in the HSAO plan, members can use in-network and out-of-network providers. Members pay the copay and/or coinsurance after the deductible is met, except for qualified preventative services that are covered without a copay or coinsurance. *Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arizona Network administered by AmeriBen. Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arizona, an independent licensee of the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association, provides Network access only and does not provide administrative or claims payment services and does not assume any financial risk or obligation with respect to claims. AmeriBen has assumed all liability for claims payment. No network access is available from Blue Cross Blue Shield plans outside of Arizona. Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 7 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Table 2 shows how enrollment was distributed by plan and network between active, retired, university, and COBRA members. Average Monthly Medical Enrollment by Plan & Network 2013 Network AETNA Active Retiree University COBRA Active Retiree University COBRA Active Retiree University COBRA AmeriBen* Active Retiree University COBRA Active Retiree University COBRA CIGNA Active Retiree University COBRA UnitedHealthcare Active Retiree University COBRA 2012 Plan Type Subscribers Members Subscribers Members EPO EPO EPO EPO PPO PPO PPO PPO HSAO HSAO HSAO HSAO 1,595 247 1,639 21 96 41 182 0 250 317 1 3,639 327 3,000 25 176 50 328 0 487 566 1 1,451 260 1,392 13 89 46 140 0 196 242 1 3,306 344 2,573 19 161 54 235 0 369 423 1 EPO EPO EPO EPO PPO PPO PPO PPO 6,513 1,125 2,185 35 310 103 300 4 16,122 1,488 4,626 41 570 122 539 7 6,112 1,105 1,889 23 267 126 267 3 15,138 1,451 3,998 33 476 153 479 5 EPO EPO EPO EPO 3,009 589 1,160 14 7,228 764 2,361 17 2,929 605 1,101 6 6,964 774 2,256 8 EPO EPO EPO 20,557 4,771 10,847 49,366 6,109 24,508 21,148 4,718 11,034 50,452 6,084 24,798 EPO 114 145 104 141 Active PPO 516 943 509 932 Retiree PPO 108 136 113 144 University PPO 602 1,153 592 1,134 COBRA PPO 4 4 6 6 Blue Cross Blue Shield** NAU only PPO 2,877 5,311 2,770 4,304 Total 60,131 130,156 59,258 127,213 Table 2: Average Medical Enrollment by Plan & Network *AmeriBen administering the Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arizona Network for the selffunded Benefit Options program. **Blue Cross Blue Shield fully insured plan only available to NAU employees and NAU retirees. Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 8 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Medical Premiums Table 3 lists the medical premium by plan and coverage tier per pay period for active members. Active Medical Premiums by Pay Period (26 pay periods)* Employee State Tier Premium Premium Employee only $18.46 $253.85 Employee + adult $54.92 $522.92 EPO Employee + child $46.62 $497.54 Family $102.00 $648.46 Employee only $71.54 $342.00 Employee + adult $161.54 $695.08 PPO Employee + child $152.77 $667.85 Family $224.31 $890.31 Employee only $12.00 $232.15 Employee + adult $47.08 $466.15 HSAO Employee + child $37.38 $450.92 Family $89.08 $583.85 Table 3: Active Medical Premiums by Pay Period *University of Arizona has 24 pay period deductions. Plan Total Premium $272.31 $577.84 $544.16 $750.46 $413.54 $856.62 $820.62 $1,114.62 $244.15 $513.23 $488.30 $672.93 State HSA Contribution $27.70 $55.39 $55.39 $55.39 Table 4 lists the monthly medical premium by plan and coverage tier for both retirees not enrolled in Medicare and for those retirees who are enrolled in Medicare, or have at least one family member enrolled in Medicare. Monthly Retiree Medical Premiums Without Medicare With Medicare Plan Tier Premium Tier Retiree only $593 Retiree only Retiree +1 $1,387 Retiree +1 (Both Medicare) EPO Retiree +1 (One Medicare) Family $1,869 Family (Two Medicare) Retiree only $943 Retiree only Retiree +1 $2,219 Retiree +1 (Both Medicare) PPO Retiree +1 (One Medicare) Family $3,074 Family (Two Medicare) Table 4: Monthly Retiree Medical Premiums Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 9 Premium $442 $878 $1,024 $1,166 $789 $1,576 $1,740 $1,980 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Medical Premium vs. Plan Cost The 2013 contribution strategy for the self-insured medical plan resulted in employees paying 11% of the average monthly total premium, while the State paid the remaining 89%. The figure below shows how the average monthly premium compared to the average monthly plan cost for active and retired members. Average Monthly Medical Premium and Plan Cost per Member $800 $700 $600 $500 Subscriber Paid $400 State Paid $300 Drugs Medical $200 Administrative $100 $Active Active Retiree Retiree Active Active Retiree Retiree Premium Plan Premium Plan Premium Plan Premium Plan Cost Cost Cost Cost 2013 2012* Figure 1: Average Monthly Premium & Plan Cost per Member *2012 Premiums are net of the legislatively mandated Premium Holiday Pursuant to A.R.S. §38.651.01(B.), retiree and active medical expenses shall be grouped together to “obtain health and accident coverage at favorable rates.” This requirement results in retiree premiums lower and active premiums higher than what their experiences would otherwise dictate. Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 10 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Expenses for Self-Funded Medical Plans The tables below show the distribution of claims and expenses incurred in PY 2013, and the average annual cost to insure each type of subscriber/member. Self-funded Medical Expenses by Active, Retiree, and Plan Expenses Medical Claims Drug Claims Medicare Part D Subsidy ERRP Reimbursement Rebates & Recoveries Administration Fees Appropriated Expenses Total Expenses EPO 409,515,551 110,508,634 (1,895,671) 4,365 (7,407,314) 23,499,888 3,971,678 538,197,131 PPO 16,991,818 7,065,358 (86,728) 181 (342,675) 978,247 165,332 24,771,534 HSAO 1,268,222 246,666 4,161 (6,824,130) 22,100,300 3,668,741 498,031,362 Retiree 37,336,187 29,177,772 (1,982,399) 398 (947,436) 3,016,068 509,741 67,110,330 84,999,055 11,800,945 92,262,990 4,268,238 268,772 Total $661,941,692 $583,030,417 $78,911,275 Enrollment in self-funded plans Subscribers 57,255 50,270 6,985 Members 124,845 115,850 8,995 Annual cost Per subscriber $ 11,561 $ 11,598 $ 11,298 Per member $ 5,302 $ 5,033 $ 8,773 Table 5: Self-funded Expenses by Active, Retiree, & Plan $630,460,120 $29,039,772 $2,441,799 54,421 119,765 2,265 4,026 568 1,053 IBNR Liability Overall 427,775,592 117,820,657 (1,982,399) 4,559 (7,771,566) 25,116,368 4,178,481 565,141,692 Active 390,439,405 88,642,885 96,800,000 $ $ 11,585 5,264 $ $ 12,819 7,213 14 (21,578) 638,232 41,471 2,173,027 $ $ 4,297 2,318 Self-funded Medical Expenses by Plan for Active & Retiree Active EPO 373,578,827 Active PPO 15,592,356 Active HSAO 1,268,222 Retiree EPO 35,936,724 Retiree PPO 1,399,463 117,820,657 (1,982,399) 4,559 82,607,359 5,788,861 246,666 3,982 166 14 27,901,275 (1,895,671) 383 1,276,497 (86,728) 15 (7,771,566) 25,116,368 4,178,481 565,141,692 (6,497,994) 20,592,602 3,480,322 473,765,098 (304,558) 869,465 146,947 22,093,237 (21,578) 638,232 41,471 2,173,027 (909,319) 2,907,286 491,356 64,432,033 (38,117) 108,782 18,385 2,678,297 96,800,000 80,936,815 3,793,468 268,772 11,326,174 474,770 Total $661,941,692 $554,701,913 $25,886,705 Enrollment in self-funded plans Subscribers 57,255 47,688 2,014 Members 124,845 111,078 3,719 Annual cost Per subscriber $ 11,561 $ 11,632 $ 12,857 Per member $ 5,302 $ 4,994 $ 6,961 Table 6: Self-funded Expenses by Plan for Actives & Retirees $ 2,441,799 $75,758,207 $3,153,067 568 1,053 6,733 8,687 252 307 Expenses (in dollars) Medical Claims Overall 427,775,592 Drug Claims Medicare Part D Subsidy ERRP Reimbursement Rebates & Recoveries Administration Fees Appropriated Expenses Total Expenses IBNR Liability Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 11 $ $ 4,297 2,318 $ $ 11,252 8,721 $ $ 12,516 10,265 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Medical Expenses Associated with Medical Diagnoses Table 7 shows how medical expenses were distributed among different diagnoses. More dollars were spent treating conditions related to the musculoskeletal system than any other diagnosis. Medical Expenses by Diagnosis for Actives & Retirees 2013 Diagnosis Musculoskeletal System and Connective Tissue Supplementary Classification of Factors Influencing Health Status and Contact With Health Service Neoplasms Symptoms, Signs, and IllDefined Conditions Injury and Poisoning Circulatory System Digestive System Genitourinary System Nervous System and Sense Organs Respiratory System Pregnancy, Childbirth, and The Puerperium Endocrine, Nutritional and Metabolic Diseases, and Immunity Disorders Mental Disorders Infectious and Parasitic Diseases Skin and Subcutaneous Tissue Blood and Blood-Forming Organs Congenital Anomalies Certain Conditions Originating in the Perinatal Period All members % of Total Actives % of Total 2012 Retirees % of Total All members % of Total Actives % of Total Retirees % of Total 13.28% 13.10% 15.10% 12.08% 12.07% 12.17% 11.03% 9.96% 11.19% 9.46% 9.39% 15.10% 10.04% 9.86% 10.20% 9.20% 8.57% 15.97% 9.47% 8.78% 6.85% 6.80% 6.11% 9.57% 8.95% 6.61% 6.85% 6.10% 8.36% 7.09% 9.29% 6.27% 6.15% 9.38% 7.52% 8.72% 5.99% 7.06% 9.64% 7.20% 9.00% 5.83% 6.58% 6.96% 10.51% 6.12% 7.42% 11.46% 5.83% 4.85% 5.52% 4.97% 9.06% 3.64% 6.93% 5.08% 7.16% 5.09% 4.83% 4.97% 4.50% 4.93% 0.02% 4.30% 4.76% 0.07% 3.99% 2.73% 3.89% 2.87% 5.07% 1.23% 4.21% 2.73% 4.12% 2.86% 5.09% 1.50% 2.07% 1.44% 2.09% 1.43% 1.84% 1.55% 2.27% 1.52% 2.30% 1.54% 1.98% 1.34% 0.88% 0.86% 0.89% 0.94% 0.75% 0.07% 0.87% 1.04% 0.88% 1.12% 0.76% 0.28% 0.59% 0.65% 0.00% 0.41% 0.45% 0.00% Supplementary Classification of External Causes of Injury and Poisoning 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% Total 100.00% 100.00% 100.00% 100.00% 100.00% 100.00% Table 7: Medical Expenses by Diagnosis for Actives & Retirees Note: Some statistics may vary slightly from previous annual reports due to the late receipt of program data following the completion of the previous annual report. In no case does the variation represent a substantive change in trend or comparative values. Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 12 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Hospital Care Inpatient hospital care represents a significant portion of total medical expenses: 35% for active members and 32% for retired members. The figures below show a comparison of hospital admissions and the average length of stay for active and retired members and EPO, PPO, and HSAO members. Hospital Admissions per 1,000 Members 250.0 Retiree 213.9 Retiree 201.7 Admissions 200.0 150.0 100.0 PPO 112.0 Active 65.4 EPO 80.1 Active 67.9 EPO 78.2 PPO 103.3 HSAO 28.5 50.0 HSAO 18.9 2013 2012 Figure 2: Hospital Admissions per 1,000 Members Inpatient Average Length of Stay Retiree 6.5 Retiree 6.3 7.0 6.0 5.0 Active 4.4 EPO 4.8 Active 4.3 EPO 4.7 HSAO 3.2 4.0 Days PPO 5.1 PPO 5.9 HSAO 2.9 3.0 2.0 1.0 2013 2012 Figure 3: Inpatient Average Length of Stay Note: Mental health, substance abuse, and maternity admissions are included. Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 13 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Hospital Care (continued) The figures below show how active/retired members and EPO/PPO/HSAO members compared statistically in number of hospital days and average cost per admission. As a group, retirees spent 4.4 times as many days in the hospital as active members. While the plan pays less for Medicare enrolled retiree admissions than for active admissions, the total cost of retiree admissions is 2 times higher than the cost of active admissions when all sources of insurance are considered. Inpatient Days per 1,000 Members 1,600.0 Retiree 1,387.1 Retiree 1,266.3 1,400.0 1,200.0 1,000.0 Days 800.0 600.0 400.0 PPO 606.3 PPO 573.5 EPO 380.4 Active 287.9 EPO 366.7 Active 291.8 HSAO 92.0 200.0 HSAO 55.5 2013 2012 Figure 4: Inpatient Days per 1,000 Members Average Cost per Admission 5,000 PPO $23,595 EPO $18,126 Retiree $30,423 Active $15,367 10,000 HSAO $11,163 15,000 HSAO $11,464 20,000 PPO $23,882 25,000 EPO $19,818 30,000 Active $16,432 35,000 Retiree $34,169 40,000 Cost-sharing* *Includes Copay, Coinsurance Medicare, and Other Insurance 0 2013 2012 Figure 5: Average Cost per Admission Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 14 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Emergency Room Visits During PY 2013, there were approximately 170 emergency room visits per 1,000 members of the self-funded plan. The average plan cost per emergency room visit was $1,320. This cost is indicative of proper utilization of emergency room visits. These figures include facility claims and professional fees. Urgent Care Visits During PY 2013, there were approximately 221 urgent care visits per 1,000 members of the self-funded plan. The average plan cost per urgent care visit was $91. Physician Visits During PY 2013, there were approximately 4,515 physician visits per 1,000 members (or each member of the self-funded plan visited a physician approximately 4 times). The average plan cost per office visit cost was $89. Figures 6 and 7 show how total active and retiree medical expenses were distributed by type of care. Emergency room care for active employees was 4.8% of medical expenses, compared to 1.97% of medical expenses for retired members. Active Employee Medical Expense by Place of Service 2.88% 0.80% 2.64% 1.64% 0.49% 4.80% Inpatient Hospital 4.95% 34.73% Office Outpatient Hospital Ambulatory Surgical ER Home Health 22.98% Independent Laboratory Other Ambulance Urgent Care Facilty 24.09% Figure 6: Active Medical Expense by Place of Service Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 15 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Retiree Medical Expense by Place of Service 2.15% 3.14% 1.21% 0.13% 5.18% 1.97% 3.63% Inpatient Hospital 32.28% Office Outpatient Hospital Ambulatory Surgical ER Home Health 23.83% Independent Laboratory Other Ambulance Urgent Care Facilty 26.48% Figure 7: Retiree Medical Expense by Place of Service Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 16 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Annual Prescription Use Figure 8 compares the average number of prescriptions filled by active and retired members for PY 2012 and PY 2013. Average Number of Prescriptions by Member per Year 35.0 Retiree 31.5 Retiree 31.3 30.0 25.0 20.0 15.0 Active 10.0 Active 9.7 10.0 5.0 - 2013 2012 Figure 8: Average Number of Prescriptions per Year Figure 9 compares pharmacy expense per utilizer by age for PY 2012 and PY 2013. Pharmacy Expense per Utilizer per Year $3,000 $2,630 $2,500 $2,138 $2,000 0-18 yrs $1,533 $1,500 $1,370 19-39 yrs 40-64 yrs $1,000 65+ yrs $633 $500 $574 $406 $332 $0 2013 2012 Figure 9: Pharmacy Expense per Utilizer per Year Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 17 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Generic and Brand-Name Prescription Use Table 8 shows how total pharmacy expenses were distributed among generic, preferred, and non-preferred types of drugs. Total Prescriptions by Tier Tier 1 Generic ($10 copay) Tier 2-Preferred ($20 copay) Tier 3-Non-Preferred ($40 copay) Total Table 8: Total Prescriptions by Tier 2013 Prescriptions 1,121,620 224,623 64,087 1,410,330 Percent 79.5% 15.9% 4.5% 100.0% 2012 Prescriptions 1,074,935 284,675 63,688 1,423,298 Percent 75.5% 20.0% 4.5% 100.0% Prescription Use by Therapeutic Class Table 9 shows the 10 most utilized classes of drugs according to total expense. More dollars were spent on diabetes than any other therapeutic class. Pharmacy Top Therapeutic Classes by Total Plan Paid 2013 Therapeutic class Plan Paid Percent Diabetes 13,843,844 10.90% Inflammatory Disease 10,110,767 7.96% Behavioral Health - Other 9,322,174 7.34% Cardiovascular Disease - Lipid 6,878,345 5.42% Asthma 6,701,347 5.28% Neoplastic Disease 6,209,999 4.89% Pain Management - Analgesics 6,047,926 4.76% Neurological Disease - Miscellaneous 6,013,200 4.74% Infectious Disease - Viral 5,579,962 4.39% Cardiovascular Disease - Hypertension 5,489,872 4.32% Behavioral Health - Antidepressants Total $ 76,197,436 60.01% Table 9: Pharmacy Top Therapeutic Classes by Plan Paid Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 18 2012 Plan Paid Percent 12,099,557 10.00% 8,197,472 6.78% 8,897,548 7.40% 9,416,313 7.78% 7,677,516 6.35% 5,710,999 5,456,252 6,476,226 5,412,245 6,236,733 $ 75,580,861 4.72% 4.51% 5.35% 4.47% 5.16% 62.52% January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Prescription Use by Type of Drug Table 10 shows the 10 most utilized drugs according to total expense. Humira is the leading prescription by cost for PY 2013. Top Ten Drugs by Total Plan Paid 2013 Plan Paid 2012 Plan Paid Drug Name Percent Drug Name Percent 4,344,534 3.42% Humira 3,276,990 2.71% Humira 2,977,875 2.35% Crestor 3,067,585 2.54% Cymbalta 2,540,418 2.00% Cymbalta 2,626,269 2.17% Enbrel 2,282,720 1.80% Enbrel 2,415,040 2.00% Copaxone 2,079,421 1.64% 2,316,883 1.92% Crestor Copaxone 1,876,169 1.48% Carbaglu 1,821,311 1.51% Abilify 1,629,963 1.28% Singulair 1,740,462 1.44% Lantus Solostar 1,596,691 1.26% Atorvastatin Calcium 1,695,500 1.40% Oxycontin 1,550,551 1.22% Oxycontin 1,646,261 1.36% Androgel 1,418,124 1.12% Abilify 1,565,730 1.29% Revlimid Total $ 22,296,466 17.56% Total $ 22,172,031 18.33% Table 10: Top Ten Drugs by Total Plan Paid Note: Some statistics may vary slightly from previous annual reports due to the late receipt of program data following the completion of the previous annual report. In no case does the variation represent a substantive change in trend or comparative values. Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 19 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Dental Plan Enrollment ADOA Benefit Options offers two different types of dental plans: a fully-insured dental health maintenance organization (DHMO) plan provided by Total Dental Administrators and a self-funded dental preferred provider organization (DPPO) plan administered by Delta Dental. DHMO Plan – Total Dental Administrators (TDA) Key components of DHMO plan include: • Seeing a participating dental provider (PDP) to provide and coordinate all dental care; • No annual deductible or maximums ($200.00 maximum reimbursement for noncontracted emergency services) under Total Dental Administrators; • $1,500 per person lifetime for orthodontia; and • No claim forms (except for emergency services). DPPO Plan – Delta Dental Key components of the self-funded DPPO plan include: • Members may see any dentist. Deductible and/or out-of-pocket payments apply; • A maximum benefit of $2,000 per person per plan year for dental services; • $1,500 per person lifetime for orthodontia; • May need to submit a claim form for eligible expenses to be paid; and • Benefits may be based on reasonable and customary charges. Table 11 shows how active employee and retiree dental enrollments were distributed among plans. Average Monthly Dental Enrollment by Plan 2013 Subscribers Members Network Plan Type Delta Dental Active DPPO 21,159 48,943 Retiree DPPO 11,215 17,386 University DPPO 13,405 27,514 COBRA DPPO 179 241 Total Dental Administrators Active DHMO 9,708 23,740 Retiree DHMO 2,104 3,203 University DHMO 5,122 11,063 COBRA DHMO 68 99 Total 62,959 132,188 Table 11: Average Dental Enrollment by Plan Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 20 2012 Subscribers Members 20,656 11,146 12,947 161 47,094 17,050 26,510 230 10,565 1,137 6,074 66 62,751 25,861 2,274 12,148 111 131,278 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Dental Premiums Table 12 shows the active employee dental premiums per pay period. Active Dental Premiums per Pay Period (26 pay periods)* Employee Tier Premium Employee only $14.30 Employee + adult $30.33 DPPO Employee + child $23.34 Family $48.26 Employee only $1.86 Employee + adult $3.72 DHMO Employee + child $3.50 Family $6.12 Table 12: Active Dental Premiums Plan State Premium $2.29 $4.58 $4.58 $6.32 $2.29 $4.58 $4.58 $6.32 Total Premium $16.59 $34.91 $27.92 $54.58 $4.15 $8.30 $8.08 $12.44 Table 13 shows the retiree monthly dental premiums. Retiree Monthly Dental Premiums Plan Tier Premium Employee only $35.94 Employee + adult $75.63 DPPO Employee + child $60.48 Family $118.26 Employee only $8.99 Employee + adult $17.98 DHMO Employee + child $17.51 Family $26.97 Table 13: Retiree Dental Premiums Dental Premium vs. Plan Cost The 2013 contribution strategy for the dental plans resulted in employees paying 85% of the average monthly total premium, and the State paying the remaining 15%. Figure 10, on page 22, shows how the average monthly premiums compared to the average monthly cost for active and retired members. Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 21 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Average Monthly Dental Premium and Plan Cost per Member (Self-funded DPPO Plan) $45 $40 $35 $30 $25 Subscriber Paid $20 State Paid $15 Dental $10 Administrative $5 $Active Premium Active Plan Cost Retiree Premium Retiree Plan Cost 2013 Figure 10: Average Dental Premiums & Expenses per Member Expenses for Self-funded Dental Plan The table below shows the distribution of dental claims and expenses incurred in PY 2013, and the average annual cost to insure each type of subscriber/member. Self-funded Dental Expenses by Active, Retiree Expenses Dental Claims Rebates & Recoveries Administration Fees Appropriated Expenses Total Expenses Overall $30,847,795 $ $ 1,408,610 $ 225,058 $32,481,463 Active 24,002,179 Retiree 6,845,616 1,096,017 175,114 25,273,310 312,593 49,944 7,208,153 IBNR Liability $ 7,600,000 5,913,439 1,686,561 Total $40,081,463 $31,186,749 $8,894,714 Enrollment in self-funded plans Subscribers 45,958 34,743 11,215 Members 94,084 76,698 17,386 Annual cost Per subscriber $ 872 $ 898 $ 793 Per member $ 426 $ 407 $ 512 Table 14: Self-funded Dental Expenses by Active & Retiree Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 22 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Wellness ADOA Benefit Options Wellness provides services to State employees, retirees, and covered dependents as part of the benefits package. Members have access to preventive health screenings, health management and health education courses, annual flu vaccines, online stress management seminars, and Employee Assistance Program (EAP) benefits. Table 15 shows the total utilization of the health screening benefit during PY 2013 and the number of at-risk employees referred for follow-up care. PY 2013 Screenings Events Participant*** Referrals Mini Health Screening* 61 2,287 406 Osteoporosis Screening** 879 13 Prostate Specific Antigen (PSA)** 157 8 Facial Skin Analysis** 1,523 57 Mobile Onsite Mammography 59 1,158 37 Prostate Onsite Projects 30 432 69 Total 150 6,436 590 Table 15: PY 2013 Wellness Screenings * The basic Mini Health Screening includes; full lipid panel, fasting blood glucose, blood pressure, BMI, and body composition. ** Optional tests offered as a package with the basic Mini Health Screening. *** Participants are not unique. Table 16 shows the total utilization of the 2013 Annual Flu Vaccine Program held October through December. Wellness provided a total of 12,624 vaccines to employees and dependents who met eligibility requirements. Members had access to the flu vaccine at a total of 635 locations, both at the worksite and at publicly held clinics. This is almost double the amount of total flu vaccine locations that were available in 2012. A total of 95.9% of members who received a flu vaccine did so at a worksite location, and 10,497 flu shot recipients held active employee status. PY 2013 Flu Vaccines State Agency Worksite University Worksite Combined Worksite (Wesley Bolin) Open Enrollment Clinics Public Clinics Total Table 16: PY 2013 Flu Vaccines Locations 127 13 4 5 486 635 Participants 9,198 157 1,481 517 1,271 12,624 Table 17, on page 24, shows the utilization of the Employee Assistance Program (EAP) and support services offered to agencies covered under the Arizona Department of Administration. Total utilization for 2013 reached over 32%, showing sustained high usage especially when compared to the 17.5% national standard for government entities. ADOA covered agencies continue to show utilization higher than our EAP Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 23 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 vendor’s Book of Business, and has seen a consistent increase in the past 5 years from 19% in 2009 to 32% in 2013. PY 2013 EAP Utilization Eligible Population Utilization Rate 8.8% 6.7% 0.5% 0.3% 1.3% 20.8% 3.2% 4.7% 1.9% 0.0% 2.9% 8.0% 1.2% 1.6% 32.4% Users Live Telephonic Access 2,040 EAP Counseling 1,550 FamilySource 115 FinancialConnect 73 LegalConnect 302 On-line Access 4,829 EAP Counseling 754 FamilySource 1,099 FinancialConnect 432 GlobalConnect 9 Health & Wellness 682 LegalConnect 1,853 Critical Incident Stress Debriefing 285 Trainings 364 Overall Utilization 23,232 7,518 Table 17: PY 2013 Employee Assistance Program Utilization In addition to health screenings, vaccines, and EAP services, the PY 2013 Wellness strategic plan provided employees access to online mindfulness and stress reduction opportunities through a first-year pilot with eMindful, Inc. The purpose of the pilot was to gain feedback from members regarding the online platform and program details in order to better serve them with this new type of wellness programming. Overall feedback of eMindful and its programming was positive and this contract continues in 2014. Table 18 shows the class series held during PY 2013 and total participation. PY 2013 Health Management Courses On-Line Courses: Mindfulness at Work (12 weeks) Classes Participants 12 231 Total 12 Table 18: PY 2013 Health Management Courses 231 The Wellness strategic plan continues to progress as scheduled. Wellness achievements for PY 2013 included, most notably, an increased EAP utilization, implementation of the eMindful contract and web-based wellness programming for all State employees, initiation of a new onsite health education class contract to address various health needs of employee groups, and increased offerings of flu clinics to eligible recipients throughout the State, making this benefit even more accessible to employees in rural areas. Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 24 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Life, Disability, Vision Insurance, and Flexible Spending Accounts Premiums Fund 3035, ERE/Benefits Administration, is used to pay insurance premiums and administer State employee benefit plans other than health and dental. Vision, supplemental, dependent, and short-term disability insurance, and flexible spending are funded solely by employee premiums. Basic life and non-ASRS long-term disability insurance are funded solely by employer premiums. Fund 3035 is primarily a passthrough fund with collections funding the insurance vendor premium payments. ERE/Benefits Administration Fund Summary PY 2013 3,410,911.15 Prior Balance December 31, 2012 $ Revenues Insurance Product Basic Life Supplemental Life Dependent Life Short Term Disability Long Term Disability Total Life & Disability $ 35,250,346.13 Amount 1,381,847.17 11,130,981.56 2,592,684.67 7,557,615.25 2,901,440.81 25,564,569.46 Vision 5,005,426.20 Health Care FSA Dependent Care FSA Total Flex Spending 3,480,700.95 1,199,649.52 4,680,350.47 Total Revenues 35,250,346.13 Expenditures Insurance Product Basic Life Supplemental Life Dependent Life Short Term Disability Long Term Disability Total Life & Disability* Amount 1,375,724.57 11,119,803.75 2,580,492.42 7,506,770.15 2,890,080.26 25,472,871.15 $ 34,929,454.47 Penalties - Vision* 4,976,653.03 (2,500.00) Health Care FSA Dependent Care FSA Administrative Fees* Total Flex Spending 3,245,229.85 1,117,163.98 118,422.00 4,480,815.83 (485.54) (485.54) GAO AFIS Cost Total Expenditures 2,100.00 34,932,440.01 (2,985.54) 34,929,454.47 Ending Balance December 31, 2013 $ 3,731,802.81 Table 19: ERE/Benefits Administration Fund Summary *Vendor administrative fees and fully insured premiums are paid 55 days in arrears per contract. Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 25 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Vendor Performance Standards Pursuant to A.R.S. § 38-658(B), “On or before October 1 of each year, the Director of the Department of Administration shall report to the Joint Legislative Budget Committee on the performance standards for health plans, including indemnity health insurance, hospital and medical service plans, dental plans, and health maintenance organizations.” Among the terms of the self-funded health insurance contracts and other contracts for the Benefit Options program are a number of ADOA-negotiated performance measures with specific financial guarantees tied to vendor performance of the contracted services. If a vendor fails to meet any of the measures within the specified performance range, the vendor is required to submit a Corrective Action Plan detailing why the measure was missed and any actions taken to address the issue and improve performance to meet the standard of the measure. A percentage of the vendor’s annual payment, or previously agreed upon amount, is then withheld by ADOA as a performance penalty per the terms of the vendor contract. This percentage is allocated among the more critical measures of the contract. The following is a report of the agreed-upon performance standards both met and missed by contracted vendors during PY 2013. In each case, performance penalties for measures missed are assessed per the terms of the individual vendor contract. Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 26 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Aetna Successfully Met Performance Measures Fees At Risk Performance Measure 23.00% of Total Administrative Fee Customer Service - 63 of 72 targets Claims Adjudication - 52 of 60 targets Appeals, Open Enrollment, Administration, Reporting, Medicare Administration & Survey – all 98 targets 16.50% Medical Management Fee Disease Management - 16 of 20 targets, pending results on 1 target Medical Management – all 6 targets 3.50% Case Management Fee Case Management – 1 target Performance Measures Not Met Percent of Total Percent Assessed Performance Measure Fees at Risk Based on Reporting Frequency 1.00% Missed 3 months of 12 Customer Service: average speed to answer call <30 months measured = 0.25% seconds. 1.00% Missed 5 months of 12 Customer Service: first call resolution 90% or greater. months measured = 0.42% 1.00% Missed 1 month of 12 Customer Service: 97% telephone call quality. months measured = 0.08% 0.50% Missed 1 month of 12 Claims Adjudication: 98% of all fully documented claims months measured = 0.04% received will be processed within 30 calendar days 1.00% Missed 4 months of 12 Claims Adjudication: 98.2% of claims dollars submitted for months measured = 0.33% payment will be accurately processed and paid. 1.00% Missed 3 months of 12 Claims Adjudication: 96% of all claims will be processed months measured = 0.25% accurately. 0.75% Missed 2 of 2 semi-annual Disease Management: clinical improvements for each measurements = .75% program will be agreed to and monitored; CAD/PAD members have had their cholesterol monitored in the past 12 months, up to a 75% target. 0.75% Missed 2 of 2 semi-annual Disease Management: clinical improvements for each measurements = .75% program will be agreed to and monitored; Post myocardial infarction (MI) Post-MI members using beta blockers in the past 12 months up to a 75% target. Vendor Performance Measures 1: Aetna Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 27 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Cigna Successfully Met Performance Measures Fees At Risk Performance Measure 15.20% of Total Administrative Fee Customer Service - 70 of 72 targets Appeals – 33 of 36 targets Reporting – 28 of 29 targets Claims Adjudication - 47 of 48 targets, pending results on 1 target Open Enrollment, Administration & Survey - all 38 targets 7.00% Medical Management Fee Medical Management – all 16 targets 8.00% Case Management Fee Case Management – all 12 targets 7.00% Disease Management Fee Disease Management – all 24 targets 5.00% Nurse Line Fee Nurse Line – 10 of 12 targets Performance Measures Not Met Percent of Total Percent Assessed Performance Measure Fees at Risk Based on Reporting Frequency 0.25% Missed 2 months of 12 Customer Service: contractor will respond to 95% or more months measured = 0.04% of all routine customer service telephone inquiries within 5 calendar days. 0.33% Missed 1 month of 12 Appeals: 100% of written appeals resolved in 15 calendar months measured = 0.03% days after receipt of participant’s request for review in the case of pre-service claims. 0.33% Missed 2 months of 12 Appeals: 100% of written appeals resolved in 45 calendar months measured = 0.05% days after receipt of participant’s request for review in the case of post-service claims. 0.25% Missed 1 month of 12 Reporting: contractor will deliver its monthly reports to the months measured = 0.03% ADOA within 30 calendar days from the end of the month. 0.50% Missed 1 month of 12 Claims Adjudication: 97% of all claims will be process months measured = 0.04% accurately. Accurate processing includes payment amount; communication to claimant or provider; data entry errors affecting current or future benefit determinations and management reports. 2.50% Missed 2 quarters of 4 Nurse Line: abandonment rate <5%. quarters = 1.25% Vendor Performance Measures 2: Cigna UnitedHealthcare Successfully Met Performance Measures Fees At Risk Performance Measure 18.55% of Total Administrative Fee Claims Adjudication - 59 of 60 targets Customer Service, Appeals, Reporting, Open Enrollment, Administration & Survey - all 164 targets 6.50% Medical Management Fee Medical Management – all 13 targets 8.50% Case Management Fee Case Management – all 16 targets 5.00% Disease Management Fee Disease Management – all 22 targets 5.00% Nurse Line Fee Nurse Line - all 12 targets Performance Measures Not Met Percent of Total Percent Assessed Performance Measure Fees at Risk Based on Reporting Frequency 2.00% Missed 1 month of 12 Claims Adjudication: 99.3% of claims dollars submitted for months measured = 0.17% payment will be accurately processed and paid. Vendor Performance Measures 3: UnitedHealthcare Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 28 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 AmeriBen Successfully Met Performance Measures Fees At Risk Performance Measure 15.00% of Total Administrative Fee Customer Service – 71 of 72 targets Administration – 27 of 28 targets Claims Adjudication – 59 of 60 targets Appeals, Open Enrollment, Reporting, Survey & Medicare Administration – all 68 targets Performance Measures Not Met Percent of Total Percent Assessed Performance Measure Fees at Risk Based on Reporting Frequency 0.10% Missed 1 month out of 12 Customer Service: contractor will acknowledge all months measured = 0.01% correspondence (inquiries and requests) within 2 working days and resolve 95% or more within 30 calendar days of receipt. 0.50% Missed 1 month out of 12 Administration: contractor will mail appropriate plan months measured = 0.04% descriptive material to participants within 2 calendar days of receiving a request. 0.75% Missed 1 month out of 12 Claims Adjudication: processing of a claim will be months measured = 0.06% completed when it has been approved for payment, denied or pended with a request for further information. 97% of all fully documented claims received will be completely processed within 10 calendar days after they are received. Vendor Performance Measures 4: AmeriBen American Health Holding Successfully Met Performance Measures Fees At Risk Performance Measure 21.00% of Total Administrative Fee Reporting – 24 of 25 targets Implementation, Systems & Survey - all 19 targets 5.00% of Disease Management Fee Disease Management – all 16 targets 10.00% of Case Management Fee Case Management – all 16 targets 10.00% of Preadmission Certification Fee Utilization Management – 2 targets 5.00% of Nurse Line Fee Nurse Line - all 12 targets Performance Measures Not Met Percent of Total Percent Assessed Performance Measure Fees at Risk Based on Reporting Frequency 1.00% Missed 1 month of 12 Reporting: contractor will submit monthly reports within 15 months measured = 0.08% calendar days following the end of the reported month. Vendor Performance Measures 5: American Health Holding MedImpact Successfully Met Performance Measures Fees At Risk Performance Measure Fixed Amounts Totaling $1,500,000 Network Management, Eligibility, Claims/Paper, Claims/Mail Order, Customer Service, Survey, Account Management, Implementation, Reporting & Generic Substitution/Utilization - all 112 targets Performance Measures Not Met Fees At Risk Total Amount Assessed Performance Measure Based on Reporting Frequency No measures missed Vendor Performance Measures 6: MedImpact Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 29 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Delta Dental Successfully Met Performance Measures Fees At Risk Performance Measure 28.92% of Total Administrative Fee Account Management, Administration, Appeals, Claims Adjudication, Customer Service, Open Enrollment, Network Management, Reporting & Satisfaction – all 258 targets Fixed Amounts Totaling $50,000 Implementation – all 4 targets Performance Measures Not Met Percent of Total Amount Assessed Performance Measure Fees At Risk Based on Reporting Frequency No measures missed. Vendor Performance Measures 7: Delta Dental Total Dental Administrators Successfully Met Performance Measures Fees At Risk Performance Measure 15.50% of Total Premiums Paid Customer Service – 46 of 48 targets Account Management, Administration, Appeals, Implementation, Open Enrollment, Network Management & Reporting – all 87 targets Performance Measures Not Met Percent of Total Amount Assessed Performance Measure Fees At Risk Based on Reporting Frequency 0.25% Missed 2 months of 12 Customer Service: average speed to answer call <=30 months measured = 0.04% seconds. 2.00% Missed 1 of 1 annual Satisfaction: no less than 80% overall member measure = 2.00% satisfaction on annual survey. Vendor Performance Measures 8: Total Dental Administrators ComPsych Successfully Met Performance Measures Fees At Risk Performance Measure 17.00% of Total Administrative Fee Customer Service – 19 of 20 targets Reporting, Program Administration & Survey – all 18 targets Performance Measures Not Met Percent of Total Percent Assessed Performance Measure Fees at Risk Based on Reporting Frequency 3.00% Missed 1 quarter of 4 Customer Service: member call abandonment Rate <3% quarters measured = 0.75% Vendor Performance Measures 9: ComPsych Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 30 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Avesis Successfully Met Performance Measures Fees At Risk Performance Measure Fixed Amounts Totaling $84,333.32 Call Center - met 34 of 36 targets Implementation, Reporting, Network Management, Claims Administration, Appeals & Survey - all 79 targets Performance Measures Not Met Fees At Risk Total Amount Assessed Performance Measure Based on Reporting Frequency $2,500 Missed 2 month out of 12 Call Center: 90% of all calls requesting a member services months measured = representative will be answered in 30 seconds or less. $416.67 Vendor Performance Measures 10: Avesis Application Software Inc. (ASI) Successfully Met Performance Measures Fees At Risk Performance Measure 33.10% of Total Administrative Fees Administration – 6 of 8 targets Claims Adjudication – met 15 of 16 targets Customer Service, Reporting & Implementation – all 25 targets Performance Measures Not Met Percent of Total Percent Assessed Performance Measure Fees at Risk Based on Reporting Frequency 2.50% Missed 2 quarters of 4 Administration: contractor will distribute materials to quarters measured = participants within 5 calendar days. 1.25% 2.50% Missed 1 quarter of 4 Claims Adjudication: 100% of claims will be processed quarters measured = within five working days. 0.75% Vendor Performance Measures 11: Application Software Inc. The Hartford Successfully Met Performance Measures Fees At Risk Performance Measure 7.28% of Total Premiums Paid Financial Payment – 11 of 12 targets Report Timeliness – 15 of 17 targets Implementation, Survey, Quality of Service, Appeals & Claimant Notification – all 75 targets 1.25% of Total STD Premiums Paid Short Term Disability Processing – all 36 targets 0.50% of Total LTD Premiums Paid Long Term Disability Processing – all 2 targets 1.00% of Total Life Premiums Paid Life Claims Processing – all 13 targets Performance Measures Not Met Percent of Total Percent Assessed Performance Measure Fees at Risk Based on Reporting Frequency 0.25% Missed 1 month out of 12 Financial Payment: maintain accuracy of 98% (defined as months measured = 0.02% the total paid dollars) reviewed minus the sum of the errors identified divided by the total paid claim dollars audited, expressed as a percentage. 0.17% Missed 2 months out of 12 Report Timeliness: contractor will submit monthly reports months measured = 0.03% within 30 calendar days after the close of month. Vendor Performance Measures 12: The Hartford Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 31 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Audit Services The Audit Services Unit provides assurances that add value to and improve the operations of the Human Resource Division (HRD). Audit Services performs systematic evaluations of contract compliance, operational controls, risk management, and the implementation of best practices to support HRD objectives. During PY 2013, 33 audit projects were completed to ensure the Benefit Options vendors provided contracted services appropriately. The audit schedule for PY 2013 was developed using a combination of contract elements and risk analysis. The 33 audit projects resulted in 23 recommendations, 17 of which were fully implemented by the end of the year, and resulted in $143,574.17 of identified recoverable overpayments. Individual audit objectives were developed with the consideration of dollar value, complexity of operations, changes in personnel or operations, loss exposure, and previous audit results. Table 20 is a summary of the functional areas in which audits were completed and the corresponding audit methodology. Audit Services Summary Functional Area Vendor operating transactions Vendor execution of benefit design and contract elements ADOA accuracy of shared data Audit program improvement initiatives Audit Methodology Statement on Standards for Attestation Engagements No. 16 Audits (“SSAE 16”) Evaluation of external audit results Plan Implementations Plan Allowances/Exclusions (“A&E”) Plan Authorizations Claims adjudication compliance Inquiries (i.e., research, plan coverage design, etc.) Dependent Eligibility Audit (DEA) Performance Guarantees Quality management standards Vendor Report Card Administrative functions and program-specific improvements Table 20: Audit Services Summary Vendor Operating Transactions All Benefit Options contracted vendors that pay claims are required to provide a copy of an SSAE 16, which is an independently assessed operational annual audit. SSAE 16 audits evaluate the internal control of the vendor’s systems utilized to adjudicate claims and identify deficiencies. Audit Services reviewed the SSAE 16 reports provided by each of the vendor’s external auditors. There were no instances of significant operating failure noted and no corrective action was required. In addition, audits performed by external or third party vendors were evaluated and considered for the development of the audit schedule when there is significant impact on the Benefit Options program and contract compliance (i.e. large medical and/or pharmacy claims audit). Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 32 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Vendor Execution of Benefit Design and Contract Elements Plan implementation audits are completed annually for new, deleted, or revised plan design elements. Implementation audits are designed to measure compliance with new and/or revised plan elements as they are executed at the start of a new plan year. Plan elements may include revisions to language in the plan document, vendor system edits (claim adjudication), plan allowances/limitations, internal controls, etc. Audit results for 2013 indicated that, in some cases, claims for compression garments, wigs/hair pieces, and amino acid based formulas were not adjudicated properly. Additionally, some thresholds were not applied to hearing aids and durable medical equipment. Estimated recoverable overpayments of $13,318.79 were identified. Plan allowance/exception (A&E) audits are designed to evaluate whether the contracted vendors’ systems were set up correctly in compliance with Benefit Options’ plan design. A&E audit findings for PY 2013 indicated that plan limitations and restrictions were processed accurately and members received the benefits allowed to them as defined in the plan description with the exception of two coverage elements. Chiropractic allowance and excluded biofeedback treatment were erroneously adjudicated. Impact reports identified recoverable overpayments of $2,347.20. Plan authorization reviews are conducted to ensure contracted vendors implement operational changes, language revisions, and claim payment exceptions in an accurate and timely manner. A plan authorization is an agreement between ADOA and the contracted vendor to revise a process or operating standard and may be initiated by either party. Results for 2013 indicated that plan authorizations were correctly implemented and no corrective action was required. Claims adjudication compliance audits are performed to evaluate the contracted vendors’ adherence to regulatory guidelines, current operating standards, contractual elements, vendor performance, and/or plan authorization documents. During PY 2013, an end-stage renal disease (ESRD) audit was conducted to follow up the initial evaluation completed in 2012 of the medical vendors’ accuracy of primary and secondary payer status. The follow up audit identified $127,908.18 of recoverable overpayments. ADOA Accuracy of Shared Data Dependent eligibility audits are performed annually on the Benefit Options program membership. The eligibility audits provide assurance that dependent eligibility is monitored effectively and the risk of claims paid on behalf of ineligible dependents minimized. The results of the 2013 eligibility audit indicated 2 ineligible individuals enrolled in the plan and who were receiving benefits erroneously due to system limitations. Additionally, 2 different dependents received benefits due to unreported or untimely filing of qualified life events. Finally, 6 dependents who received benefits were removed from the plan because the subscribers did not provide documentation supporting their dependent statuses. Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 33 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Appendix Table A: Special Employee Health Fund Cash Statement Prior Balance December 31, 2012 Revenues Source ADOA Health Plan (EE) ADOA Health Plan (ER) BCBS NAU Plan (EE) BCBS NAU Plan (ER) ADOA Dental Plan (EE) ADOA Dental Plan (ER) PrePaid Dental Plan (EE) PrePaid Dental Plan (ER) Other Revenue Net Revenue Premiums 134,147,242.76 601,734,579.25 6,634,740.19 27,064,992.08 31,665,258.39 5,235,190.50 1,771,282.67 1,730,163.48 163,733.63 810,147,182.95 Admin Fees 1,177,437.76 2,659,200.61 2,382,069.35 13,434,992.10 4,022,709.93 1,066,661.50 1,408,609.62 659,400.59 2,794.29 26,813,875.75 Claims Harrington Aetna Cigna UnitedHealthcare AmeriBen Other Wellness MedImpact Delta Dental Medicare Part D Retiree Drug Subsidy Early Retiree Reinsurance Program Net Claims Self-Insured Expenditures BCBS (NAU Only) Delta Dental Total Dental Administrators Fully Insured Expenditures*** HITF Operating Fund Transfers Out^ Federal Participation Reimbursement NET EXPENDITURES 0.00 30,013,939.89 42,885,856.15 328,079,667.02 103,979,651.94 649,169.50 125,985,242.94 33,437,510.58 665,031,038.02 Premiums 32,340,627.85 3,186,760.40 3,523,302.50 39,050,690.75 4,403,539.75 73,496,000.00 5,104,143.00 813,899,287.27 Fund Balance December 31, 2013 IBNR Liability (Medical & Dental) Contingency Reserve (Medical & Dental) Unrestricted Cash Balance As Of December 31, 2013 Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 34 PY 2013 276,902,422.88 810,147,182.95 $ 803,851,668.61 $ 283,197,937.22 $ $ 104,400,000.00 104,400,000.00 $ 74,397,937.22 Reductions 0.00 810,147,182.95 Expenditures Vendor AHH Medical Management Aetna Cigna UnitedHealthcare AmeriBen MedImpact Delta Dental Other Fees** AG Collection Fees Net Administrative Fees*** $ $ Penalties 0.00 (18,258.58) (17,496.10) (49,737.50) (3,406.03) (200,000.00) 0.00 (288,898.21) 26,524,977.54 Recoveries* (84,560.50) 0.00 (376.58) (41,573.08) (707,891.39) (6,937,164.83) 0.00 (1,982,399.22) 4,559.23 (9,749,406.37) 655,281,631.65 681,806,609.19 Penalties (9,314.08) (9,314.08) 39,041,376.67 (10,047,618.66) 4,403,539.75 73,496,000.00 5,104,143.00 803,851,668.61 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 *Recoveries include prescription drug rebates, overpayment recoveries (including stop payments and voids), subrogation recoveries, etc. **Other Fees include HSA Administration, surcharges by other states (MA, MI, NYHCR), and legal fees. ***Vendor administrative fees and fully insured premiums are paid 55 days in arrears per contract. ^Interfund transfers from HITF to other State operating funds. Future transfers include $53.9 million pursuant to Laws 2014, Chapter 18, Sec. 139 (HB2703 2014-2015; general appropriations) for fiscal year 2015. Glossary of Terms Active member(s) – An employee and their eligible dependents, as defined in the Arizona Administrative Code, who are enrolled in one of the health plan options offered by the State. (Also referred to as “actives”) Administrative fees – Fees paid to third-party vendors for plan administration, network rental, transplant network access fees, shared savings for negotiated discounted rates with other providers, COBRA administration, direct pay billing, additional reporting billing, State fees (MA, MI and NY), and bank reconciliation fees. Case management – A collaborative process that facilitates recommended treatment plans to ensure that appropriate medical care is provided to disabled, ill, or injured individuals. Claim – A provider’s demand upon the payer for payment for medical services or products. Claim appeal – A request by an insured member for a review of the denial of coverage for a specific medical procedure contemplated or performed. COBRA, Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1985 – A federal law that requires an employer to allow eligible employees, retirees, and their dependents to continue their health coverage after they have terminated their employment or are no longer eligible for the health plan - COBRA enrollees must pay the total contribution, in addition to an administrative fee of 2%. Contribution strategy – A premium structure that includes both the employer’s financial contribution and the employee’s financial contribution towards the total plan cost. Copayment – A form of medical cost-sharing in the health plan that requires the member to pay a fixed dollar amount for a medical service or prescription. Deductible – A fixed dollar amount that a member pays during the plan year, before the health plan starts to make payments for covered medical services. Dependent – An unmarried child or a spouse of the employee who meets the conditions established by the relevant plan description. DHMO/Pre-Paid Dental – A dental plan that offers members dental services with no annual maximums or claim forms, and services based on a discounted rate. Total Dental is the current prepaid dental vendor. Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 35 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 DPPO – A dental plan, with an in-network and out-of-network coinsurance structure, that allows members to visit any dentist. There is an annual deductible, and maximum annual benefit of $2,000 per member per year for dental services. The current administrator for the DPPO plan is Delta Dental. Disease management – A comprehensive, ongoing, and coordinated approach to achieving desired outcomes for a population of patients. These outcomes include improving members’ clinical conditions and qualities of life as well as reducing unnecessary healthcare costs. These objectives require rigorous, protocol-based, clinical management in conjunction with intensive patient education, coaching, and monitoring. Eligibility appeal – The process for a member to request a review of a health plan decision regarding a claimant’s qualifications for, or entitlement to, benefits under a plan. Employee – As defined in the Arizona Administrative Code who works for the State of Arizona or a State university. Exclusive Provider Organization (EPO) – A health plan designed with an exclusive provider organization or network. Enrollees are limited to access in-network providers and are subject to co-pays. Any exceptions require prior authorization. Flexible spending account (FSA) – An account that can be set up through the State’s Benefit Options program, an FSA allows an employee to set aside a portion of his/her earnings to pay for qualified medical and dependent care expenses. Money deducted from an employee's pay and put into an FSA is not subject to payroll taxes. Formulary – A list of preferred medications covered by the health plan. The list contains generic and brand-name drugs. The most cost-effective brand-name drugs are placed in the “preferred” category and all other brand-name drugs are placed in the “non-preferred” category. Fully-insured – An insurance model wherein a commercial insurer collects premiums, pays claims for services, and takes the risk of revenue to expense. Benefit Options may collect the premiums for transfer to the commercial insurer. Health Savings Account Option (HSAO) – An account that allows individuals to pay for current health expenses and save for future health expenses on a tax-free basis. Only certain plans are HSA-eligible. Integrated – A health plan operation administered by one entity. Such operations include: claims processing and payment, a network of medical providers, utilization management, case management, and disease management services. Medicare – The federal health insurance program provided to those who are age 65 and older, or those with disabilities, who are eligible for Social Security benefits. Medicare has four parts: Part A, which covers hospitalization; Part B, which covers physicians and medical providers; Part C, which expands the availability of managed Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 36 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 care arrangements for Medicare recipients; and Part D, which provides a prescription drug benefit. Retirees signing up for ADOA insurance must enroll in Parts A and B, but not C or D. Member – A health plan participant. spouse, or dependent. This individual can be an employee, retiree, Network – An organization that contracts with providers (hospitals, physicians, and other health care professionals) to provide health care services to members. Contract terms include agreed upon fee arrangements for services and performance standards. Non-integrated – A health plan with operations administered by multiple entities. These operations include claims processing and payments, a network of medical providers, and disease management services. Payer – The entity responsible for paying a claim. Pharmacy benefit manager – An organization that provides a pharmacy network, processes and pays for all pharmacy claims, and negotiates discounts on medicines directly from the pharmaceutical manufacturers. These discounts are passed to the employer/payer in the form of rebates and reduced costs in the formulary. Plan year – Defined as the period of January 1 through December 31 of a given year. Preferred Provider Organization (PPO) – A health plan designed with a preferred provider organization or network. Enrollees have access to in-network and out-ofnetwork providers, and are subject to co-pays, or co-insurance, and annual deductibles. Out-of-network providers require greater copays. Premium – The agreed-upon fees paid for medical insurance coverage. Premiums are paid by both the employer and the health plan member. Retiree – A former State of Arizona employee, State university employee, officer, or elected official who is retired under a State-sponsored retirement plan. For reporting purposes, this term encompasses both actual retirees and their dependents. Self-funded – An insurance program wherein Benefit Options collects premiums, pays claims, and assumes the risk of revenues to expenses. Self-insured – A plan that is funded by the employer who is financially responsible for all medical claims and administrative expenses. Spouse – A dependent legally married to an employee or a retiree, as defined by the Arizona Revised Statutes. Stop-loss – A form of insurance for self-insured employers that limits the amount that the employer, as primary insurer, will pay for medical expenses. Subscriber – An employee, officer, elected official, or retiree who is eligible and enrolls in the health plan. Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 37 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Third party administrator – An organization that handles all administrative functions of a health plan including: processing and paying claims, compiling and producing management reports, and providing customer service. Utilization management – The evaluation of appropriateness and efficiency of health care services procedures and facilities according to established criteria or guidelines and under the provisions of an applicable health benefits plan. Utilization review – A process whereby an insurer evaluates the appropriateness, necessity, and cost of services provided. Utilizer – A member who receives a specific service. Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 38 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013 Arizona Department of Administration Human Resources Division 100 N. 15th Avenue, Suite 261 Phoenix, Arizona 85007 Telephone: 602-542-5482 Health Insurance Trust Fund Annual Report 39 January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013