Telemedicine benefits aren’t just a passing employee benefits trend. More than 80% of large employers surveyed by Towers Watson say they will offer a telemedicine benefit by 2018. As a result, carriers are offering telemedicine in their major medical plans. Your clients might have the opportunity to choose their carrier’s telemedicine benefit–but before you promote this option for its convenience, it’s essential to remember that carrier-provided telemedicine and employer-provided options are much, much different; it's apples to oranges.
Carriers are adopting telemedicine in ways that will never allow
employers or employees to realize the full value of this new healthcare
delivery method. As a broker, you need to be able to identify where the real savings and value will be for your clients.
Here are three reasons telemedicine benefits through a carrier just doesn’t hit the mark for your clients:
1. The carrier sees it as just another way to generate a claim.
Telemedicine is more than a “perk” for employees. It is much different from a nurse line–but unfortunately, many carriers package it in a similar way.
When a telemedicine consultation is completed through a carrier,
copays are charged to employees and claims are created and processed.
From the employee’s perspective, it operates just like using their
insurance to see a doctor in-person, except they can do so from their
home. This is just another claim your carrier can charge you for.
Even if your clients offer generous medical benefits, telemedicine
saves employees two to four hours of waiting in a doctor’s office or 19
days trying to even see the doctor. This could be an incredible way to
give your employees time and money back–not just a reason for your
carrier to generate another claim.
2. There’s little (or no) engagement strategy.
Employees are already wary of insurance. We’ve all been there: Costs of healthcare are opaque, and we never know when surprise charges will pop up as we’re checking out at the urgent care.
So when we find out there’s been a change in our coverage, we delay
care. We wait it out because changes in healthcare and cost-shifting are
intimidating. We don’t want to face the high deductibles and larger
co-pays that many major medical plans now require.
The telemedicine companies you recommend should engage and encourage
your clients’ employees. If your employees never understand and feel
comfortable with their telemedicine benefit, they won’t utilize it.
Which won’t benefit anyone, and your clients will be wasting their
money.
The carrier does not provide education around how to use it or why to
use it when telemedicine comes as a supplement from your carrier. They
do not have in-depth, long-term engagement strategies that will
constantly increase utilization and drive savings.
3. These low utilization rates kill ROI and savings, anyway.
The lack of communication and engagement is the reason why the average carrier-provided telemedicine utilization rate is 1%. With such a low percentage of employees using the benefit, it won’t be driving nearly as much savings in healthcare costs and productivity costs as it could be.
This is especially true when telemedicine companies charge a co-pay:
If the $40 telemedicine co-pay is just as much as going to an Urgent
Care of physician visit, the employees will not change the way they
access healthcare by making the telemedicine call.
This is why choosing a carrier-provided telemedicine benefit with a
low PEPM provides almost no value to your clients and their employees.
But choosing a provider with a higher PEPM, like TelaCare, also comes
with an average utilization rate of 43.5%. We drive an average
of 37% direct return on investment with our customized engagement
strategy––while competitors with low utilization actually cost you -72% ROI.
The Diagnosis
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