Showing posts with label group health insurance utah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label group health insurance utah. Show all posts

Sunday, October 6, 2013

Enrolling in Arches Health Plan



Thank you for your interest in enrolling in Arches Health Plan. Arches is committed to help you enroll in the way that suits you best.
To enroll you will need to know the following:

  • What you filed as your income on your W-2 (Spouse's W-2)

  • The Social Security Numbers for each person that you would like to cover

  • The Date of Birth for each person that you would like to cover
More Info : enroll health utah

Eye-Opening Lessons from Arches ‘Ask the ACA Experts’ Telethon on KUTV Channel 2

Last Tuesday Arches held an-all day ‘Ask the Experts’ telethon on KUTV Channel 2 giving the public a chance to ask questions about the Affordable Care Act. The all-day event offers important lessons on the public’s need for help navigating their choices on the new marketplace for insurance…
arches channel 2
- The Utah public may not be ready for October 1, when enrollment is open on the new marketplace.
- The key to engaging the young immortals may be their parents and grandparents.
- Seniors are scared about changes to Medicare, though they have no reason to be.
- As a community, we need to have something coherent to say to the many Utahns who would qualify for the Medicaid expansion if state leaders choose to opt in. For now, Arches would suggest these individuals connect with policy groups working on this issue like Utah Health Policy Project
- See more at: http://www.archeshealth.org/myarchesmyhealth/#sthash.Vtz9htZk.dpuf

Monday, September 30, 2013

Your Guide through the Affordable Care Act, Nathan Johns


My name is Nathan Johns and I am the Chief Financial Officer with Arches Health Plan. Arches Health Plan is a new cooperative health insurance company focused solely on Utah to serve Utahns with affordable and accessible healthcare insurance.
- See more at: Your Guide through the Affordable Care Act, Nathan Johns

5 Terms Every CFO Should Know

As the full implementation of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) gets closer, CFOs are taking upon a stronger role with those they are responsible for, recognizing that this new law directly impacts human resources, finance, internal audit and tax. Many CFOs are estimating that it may take up to 18 months to budget, plan and implement compliance-driven changes. With open enrollment starting in October 2013, understanding the basic terms of the ACA must be at the forefront of every CFO’s agenda.

SILVER-Level plan - Arches Health Plan

This SILVER-Level plan is for people who want to partner with their physicians for better, more deliberate and informed health care. New benefits like telephone consultations and secure internet diagnostics are covered, as are extras like no-deductible accidents, a health action plan, and shared decision-making tools.

Monday, September 23, 2013

The Importance of Eating Healthy and Being Active

One of the most frustrating yet potentially powerful conversations I have with patients is about their lifestyle. It is not uncommon for me on a daily basis to discuss patients poor lifestyle and how it is affecting not only their health but their wallet. Being sick costs a lot of money and good years of life. It is estimated 2/3 of us in the USA are either obese (BMI 30+) or overweight (BMI 26-30). Along with being overweight, there is an increased risk of high blood pressure, diabetes, arthritis, high cholesterol, heart disease, stroke, cancer, sleep apnea, heart failure, depression, liver disease, menstrual problems, infertility, gallbladder problems, etc. Holy-smokes, that is a boat load of problems and all because of me not doing the things every day to invest in myself.

Read More:  The Importance of Eating Healthy and Being Active

Are You a Person or a Part??

I remember back when I was going to Medical School in Wisconsin. I had grown up in a nice area of Salt Lake City and was raised around a number of physicians who were great specialists in different areas of medicine. One of those was the best back surgeon in town and the other was an outstanding Perinatologist. I remember saying, “I will never be a primary care doctor!” I thought primary care was the type of medicine practiced by those who had no other options and lacked the intelligence of a quality medical student. I thought, “If you were really smart you obviously chose to go into a specialty that made lots of money!” My uneducated dream choice was to go into Anesthesia because I knew some anesthesiologists that made a great living and seemed to have a pretty sweet lifestyle. That’s what I hoped I would fall in love with.

Read More:  Are You a Person or a Part??

Who is Dr. Douglas Roland Smith?

It is my goal and passion to develop new and inventive ways to provide quality care to patients in a fiscally constricted environment. To accomplish this lofty goal and disrupt the market with payment reform, I took a position with Arches Health Plan as their Chief Medical Officer last year.

Dr. Douglas Roland Smith
Dr. Douglas Roland Smith

I was born and raised in Salt Lake City. Following graduation from the University of Utah with a Bachelor of Science in biology, I was fortunate to spend five years conducting medical research while attending the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. - See more at: http://www.archeshealth.org/drdougsdoctalk/#sthash.C4JPuQWa.dpuf

Win Dinner with Kyle Beckerman!


Contestants must be 18 or older to enter.
The winner will be announced on Oct 23rd during half-time of the Real game.
Complete the form on  Win Dinner with Kyle Beckerman! for a chance to win a private dinner with Kyle Beckerman

Sunday, September 8, 2013

Arches Q&A Video

Arches Health Plan
5505 S. 900 E. Suite 100, Salt Lake City, UT 84117
801.312.9860

Arches Perfect Day Commercial

Arches Health Plan
5505 S. 900 E. Suite 100, Salt Lake City, UT 84117
801.312.9860

Arches Around the House Commercial

Arches Health Plan
5505 S. 900 E. Suite 100, Salt Lake City, UT 84117
801.312.9860

Arches Health Plan

Arches Health Plan
5505 S. 900 E. Suite 100, Salt Lake City, UT 84117
801.312.9860

Arches Health Plan Extended

Arches Health Plan
5505 S. 900 E. Suite 100, Salt Lake City, UT 84117
801.312.9860

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Arches Health Plan Brokers and Consultants


Brokers and consultants - arches health plan from Arches Health Plan

Arches Health Plan
5505 S. 900 E. Suite 100, Salt Lake City, UT 84117
801.312.9860
cheap health insurance in utah

Arches Health Plan for Health Care Professionals


Health care professionals - arches health plan from Arches Health Plan

Arches Health Plan
5505 S. 900 E. Suite 100, Salt Lake City, UT 84117
801.312.9860
health insurance companies in utah

Arches Plan For Individuals and Families


Individuals and families - arches health plan from Arches Health Plan

 Arches Health Plan
5505 S. 900 E. Suite 100, Salt Lake City, UT 84117
801.312.9860
cheap health insurance in utah

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Bases para empezar a correr - Arches

No se imagina la cantidad de veces que me piden que vea por qué a alguien le duelen los pies cuando empieza a hacer ejercicio. La consulta típica es “Me propuse ponerme en forma y entonces decidí empezar a correr.

Read More Here: http://okespanol.com/bases-para-empezar-a-correr/

(801) 550-3197
http://archeshealth.org
tmcgarry@archeshealth.org
5505S 900E, Ste. 100,
Salt Lake City, UT 84117

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Creating Gold, Silver and Bronze Benefits – Vanilla or Spumoni

I’ve talked to a lot of agents (and other folks) that believe that the Affordable Care Act requires all Exchange benefits to be basically the same – Gold, Silver or Bronze. They believe that these metallic benefits are highly regulated and will eliminate “qualified high-deductible health plans” (QHDHP) which support Health Savings Accounts. They think that there is virtually no wiggle room in Silver. At least that is the rumor. Fortunately this is not true, or at least it doesn’t have to be true.

First a recent counter-example: The California Health Benefits Marketplace exchange (called Covered California) announced that they were going to standardize their metallic plans and require all health plans offer only those identical plans. Competition would occur only by way of premiums and provider panels. Their reasoning was that consumers needed a true, identical apples-to-apples comparison to properly shop.

You can see their approved benefit structure here:

http://www.coveredca.com/media/10748/CoveredCA-HealthPlanBenefitsComparisonChart.pdf

As you can see, Covered California will not offer QHDHP’s. Hopefully this will not become the norm with other state exchanges.

Most exchanges, including the federal marketplace, will allow health plans the ability to create their own plans – as long as they meet metallic guidelines and include required “essential health benefits”.  Various combinations of deductibles, coinsurance, copayments and out-of-pocket limits will be allowed – as long as they can be actuarially “scored” as proper metallic values. If a QHDHP can be created within the guidelines, they should and often will be allowed.

METALLIC BENEFITS

The rule for being certified metallic is that the “actuarial value” (AV) of the benefits comply with the following chart:

Bronze (60%) – must score between 58% & 62% AV

Silver (70%) – must score between 68% & 72% AV

Gold (80%) – must score between 78% & 82% AV

Platinum (90%) – must score between 88% and 92% AV

Catastrophic (57%) – with specific benefit requirements

What does actuarial value mean? It is the average expected payout by the health plan when a large standard population’s claims are run through the benefits. So if on “average” a particular health benefit plan design would pay 70% of the claims, then that would be considered a Silver plan. As you can imagine, there are numerous combinations of benefits (deductibles and copays, etc…) that could yield Silver benefits. It turns out that even a QHDHP can garner a Silver (or Bronze or even Gold) ranking.

UNLOCK YOUR INNER ACTUARY

I recently was referred to the government’s actuarial calculator. It is the exchange’s official scorekeeper. When an actuary comes up with a benefit plan, they run it through this calculator to get the official metallic certification. If the benefits do not meet the essential health benefit, then the calculator “fails” the plan and it cannot be sold in any exchange. If the official AV calculator certifies the plan’s unique benefits, then they are good to go in the appropriate metallic band (except in California of course).

The good news is that I was able to come up with all kinds of different Silver plans. I started with a few common plan designs and then, when I got comfortable with the AV calculator, I went wild. I thought up all kinds of goofy Silver and Bronze plans that no one would sell (or would they?!). It wasn’t too hard to come up with several Bronze and Silver QHDHP benefit designs. It was a bit more difficult with Gold, but do-able. Then I got serious about designing innovative (…or stupid, I’m not sure yet…) plan designs. It’s nice to be able to think outside the box, but not have to spend money on actuaries to rate each crazy idea.

If there are any doubts, I really had a blast with this.

If, like me, you think designing metallic benefits are a fun pastime (or if you are suffering from insomnia and want a non-chemical solution) try unleashing your inner actuary:

No password needed. Have fun!

http://cciio.cms.gov/resources/files/av-calculator-final-2-20-2013.xlsm

Let me know if you come up with a winning plan design. We may use it for one of Arches Health Plans.

EXCHANGE PRODUCTS AND SUBSIDIES

Every health plan within an exchange is required to offer at least one Silver plan and one Gold plan. If the plan chooses, they may offer a Platinum plan and/or a Bronze plan and/or a catastrophic plan (explained below).  Some exchanges, such as Covered California may require plans to offer all metallic products, not just Gold and Silver. Most health plans will want to offer Bronze and Catastrophic plans alongside of the required Gold and Silver. Most plans will not want to offer Platinum benefits, believing them to be a magnet for the really expensive cases.

The subsidy value is based on the premiums of the second lowest priced Silver plan of those available in the zip code of the enrollee. The actual subsidy is based the enrollees income. Once the subsidy is determined, then the enrollee may choose different plans, but would be responsible for the incremental difference in premium (whether higher or lower).  It is possible that in some unique cases, a particular Bronze plan may actually have zero premiums after the subsidy.

In addition to a premium subsidy, there are certain “benefit enhancements” required for Silver plans chosen by the lowest income families. When incomes are less than 150% of the federal poverty level, enrollees are entitled to enhanced “Silver” benefits. The exchange will assign Silver levels of 73%AV, 87%AV and 94%AV. These enhanced Silver plans are not “sold” but rather assigned by the exchange based on the enrollees income.

Covered California has published their required benefits for those enhanced Silver levels:

http://www.coveredca.com/media/10745/CoveredCA_HealthPlanBenefitsSummary.pdf

Another type of exchange product will be the “Catastrophic Plan”, with a 57% AV. The Catastrophic benefit structure is pretty well defined by code. It must include exactly three first dollar offices visits, but no other first dollar benefits. It is only sold to those aged 21 through 29 and to some strange situations where a person does not qualify for a subsidy, but Silver coverage is technically “unaffordable”. (This is a quirk where an older person, who has higher rates than a younger person, has income just outside the subsidy range but the Silver plan costs more than 9.5% of their income – rare but worth mentioning.)

Another required plan benefit design is exclusively for Native Americans with incomes less than 300% FPL. Qualified Native Americans are entitled to special benefits with 100% AV. Of course a 100% AV plan means that there are zero co-payments, deductibles and co-insurances due from the Native American enrollee. (Not much plan design work needed there.)

For all the enhanced benefit plans, the federal government will reimburse the health plans for any benefits paid beyond the standard benefits.

CONCLUSION

The bottom line is that the federal actuarial value calculator has surprisingly few restrictions. Many thousands of different plan designs are possible. The only limitations are the imagination of the health plan, the ability to administer the benefits and an exchange flexible enough for innovation and out-of-the-box thinking. In my view, it is unfortunate that Covered California will only allow vanilla plan designs. The benefit world is so much more satisfying with 31 flavors (or more).

Arches Health Plan will be benefit design innovators. Because if Arches Health Plan doesn’t change things, how is healthcare going to get better?
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