Archive for the ‘Employee Benefits’ Category

How Did My 2011 Predictions Turn Out?

Sunday, January 1st, 2012

By Evan Falchuk

Pretty well, actually.

As predicted last December, there was no big change to health care reform, doctors still didn’t have enough time with their patients, Microsoft made moves to create a “Windows” for electronic health records, and “ACO” became the hot buzzword in health care.  Some state governments started major redesigns of their benefits programs, saving money in the same ways private sector employers do.  Meanwhile, more than ever, private sector employers are penalizing employees who don’t take care of themselves.

Misdiagnosis finally started to be recognized as a public health problem.  At Best Doctors we got a great deal of press coverage in 2011 on this (for a few examples, go here, here, here, here and here).  I will sneak in a 2012 prediction and tell you that you will hear a lot more about this this year, and not just from us.

What did I get wrong?

Well, I said no major employer would drop their health benefits – and none did, so I didn’t really get this wrong.  But I was surprised to hear some very major employers quietly talking about their plans for dropping coverage in 2014.  It’s a bad idea – and I would have thought its badness would have been enough to keep it off the table.  For some employers, apparently not.

I also can’t point you to signs that the health insurance system is starting to take on the bad aspects of the workers compensation system.  Instead, many of the Fortune 100 employers we work with are trying to make their benefits plans simpler and easier to use.  I’m glad to be wrong about that so far.

Here are the two biggest misses.

First, I predicted a doctor would get sued for offering medical advice to a patient on line.  It didn’t happen in 2011.  Interestingly, there was (finally) a lawsuit claiming gag orders on posting reviews of medical providers on-line were unenforceable, something I thought would have happened a long time ago.

Second, I thought that health care reform would be more popular at the end of 2011 than it was at the beginning.  According to the Kaiser Health Tracking Poll for December 2011, in January, 41% of Americans had a “favorable” opinion of health care reform.  In December?  Forty-one percent.  A better prediction would have been that no one’s minds would be changed….

For my 11 predictions for 2011, I got 8 right.  Not bad, but I have to do better in 2012.

So, for 2012, I will make only one prediction – the world won’t end on December 21, 2012.

I feel good about this one- I’m wrong, no one will be here to see.

My Speech on the Intrepid

Thursday, June 2nd, 2011

By Evan Falchuk

Last night, aboard the U.S.S. Intrepid in New York, a client of ours, Ogilvy, held a moving charitable gala to support their foundation.  It’s called Ogilvy Cares, and the night raised money for a remarkable organization called CancerCare, which helps people cope with the realities of life with cancer.  Best Doctors was honored at this event for our work against cancer.

The event featured a mini-concert by Jordin Sparks – who was awesome.  There was also a performance by a band called N.E.D. (No Evidence of Disease), which is made up of leading gynecologic cancer surgeons from across the country.  They rock – and are an amazing story of the power of music to raise awareness of gynecologic cancers.

Below the fold you can read the text of what I said last night.

It reveals a secret: how each of us has the power to fight cancer.

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Making Health Care Better

Sunday, February 6th, 2011

By Evan Falchuk

Dick Quinn of quinn’s commentary has a pithy post about why it’s hard for the government to control health care costs:

Nobody complains about the cost of health care rather they complain about their insurance premiums or their payroll deductions for health benefits.

He’s right about what politicians react to.  The health care reform law is loaded with things that are meant to contain the price of coverage.

But I would add two words to his post.

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You Want Real Health Care Reform? It’s Here

Tuesday, September 28th, 2010

By Evan Falchuk

“We want our employees to spend their time on real issues,” said Charlie Salter, VP of Benefits at ConAgra.  He means it.  Charlie and ConAgra have built their health care benefits around some simple concepts that are yielding impressive results.

How impressive?

Close to flat health care cost trend since 2007.

Charlie’s work is part of a growing trend among America’s most innovative companies:  designing health care benefits in ways that have a real impact on quality and cost.  It’s why I asked Charlie to share the podium with me in Boca Raton this morning.  ConAgra is showing it’s possible to control health care costs by helping people do the right thing.

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How Government Gets Ripped Off

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010

By Evan Falchuk

At the beginning of the school year in my hometown, teachers ask parents to donate supplies for the classroom.  They’re often very basic necessities like markers and folders and things.  The school can’t afford them, so teachers ask for help so they don’t have to pay for them out of their own pockets.

If you’re thinking I live in a distressed area, you’re wrong.  I live in a wealthy suburb in one of the wealthiest, highest-taxed states in the country.  Even here, public school teachers aren’t paid enough, and don’t have enough resources.  How is this possible?

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If You Don’t Use Social Media, Here’s How to Start

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

By Evan Falchuk

When health care reform became law, HR and benefits professionals I spoke with had two reactions: surprise and annoyance.  Surprise, because they thought reform was dead; annoyed, because the law was full of provisions that didn’t make sense to them.

But it was partly their own fault.

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  • "Medicine is learned by the bedside and not in the class room. Let not your conception of manifestations of disease come from work heard in the lecture room or read from the book: see and then research, compare and control. But see first."
    - Sir William Osler, MD
    The Father of Modern Medicine
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