CEO's Guide to Restoring the American Dream Page 9
Promoters Undercut Their Own Data
Tellingly, promoters’ own data consistently and convincingly undermine their claims, which is easily shown using facts, data, and basic arithmetic. Here are some examples to support this thesis—keep in mind that we’re using what the industry says about itself.
1. A national leading workplace wellness program promoter’s own conclusions and assertions have shown that a perfect workplace wellness program targeting cardiac care would have a negative ROI of $100 per employee per year.
2. An analysis in Health Affairs of Connecticut’s workplace wellness program concluded that it increased costs. The state justified it by saying it increased the number of checkups, even though the US Preventive Services Task Force Guidelines and the Journal of the American Medical Association have concluded that checkups don’t improve health and are more likely to find problems that don’t exist.
3. The Health Enhancement Research Organization’s—the wellness industry’s trade association—own guidebook shows that workplace wellness programs don’t generate positive ROI.
4. The industry’s trade publication has published articles that conclude 90 to 95 percent of workplace wellness programs have no impact, that only poorly-designed clinical studies on programs show strong ROI, and that an editor concluded “Who cares about an ROI anyway?”
5. The data submitted by winners of the industry’s top Koop award—which is selected by wellness industry executives—over the last couple of years show that they didn’t save money and, in some cases, showed that health actually deteriorated.
These are just a few examples of many I could have selected. If you want to dive deeper, Appendix A has more detailed summaries for each.
The Bottom Line
I can only conclude two things from these examples.
First, there are no savings in conventional workplace wellness programs. Giving employees lots of time off to exercise might be a good idea for other reasons—just don’t try to calculate savings from it.
Second, there’s no getting around it. Many, if not most, vendors lie about ROI.
Money spent on workplace wellness programs—upwards of $100 to $150 per employee per year just for the vendor fees—is wasted. Plus, this doesn’t include all the peripheral tangible and intangible costs, like time spent engaging in the programs. Further, the fees cover only the administrative medical expenses, not the expenses submitted via claims forms. Superfluous annual checkups urged by vendors probably double that figure. Employee incentives to get them to use programs likely double it again.
Speaking of ROI, the fastest way in this book to create a ROI is to reduce screening frequencies to follow established, age-appropriate, USPSTF guidelines. Not only will you avoid the expense, but you’ll also avoid potentially harming your employees. Based on the data in this book alone, that would be a significant improvement over what is happening now.
Another possibility would be to explore the proposed 401W Savings Plan, which aligns incentives between employers and employees to work towards long-term health maintenance, while saving employers money and quite literally giving people financial responsibility for taking care of themselves.91 It also increases employee retention, as well as program satisfaction.
Sound good so far? If you need one more reason to look into the 401W Savings Plan, here it is. As most people in the industry know, Al Lewis is the Mikey of wellness. He hates everything. But he likes this a lot.92
Yes, Virginia, There Are Workplace Wellness Programs That Work
Like ABC’s Wide World of Sports, we’ve spanned the globe looking for workplace wellness programs that work. We ‘ve found three.
First is Cummins, a diesel engine manufacturer with 55,000 employees. When Fortune, went looking for the best, this was the one they found.93 After years of trying to “preach the gospel” of wellness with conventional screenings, Cummins realized it wasn’t working. So they rebooted a new model with a “continuum” of services that employees could select from to reach their goals. Plus, much of what Cummins does is environmental—such as workplace design—so there is no need for employees to “opt in.” Well-being comes to them.
For those who want to adopt a healthier lifestyle, Cummins offers many opt-in opportunities. This is in sharp contrast to conventional programs that try to make employees healthy whether they want it or not. No wonder they consistently make the Fortune list of the 100 best places to work.
Next, Workforce magazine highlighted the Hilliard County (OH) Schools.94 Their wellness leader, Debbie Youngblood, had the insight that, for example, you can’t teach employees to eat less sugar if they don’t know where that sugar is hidden in the ingredients labels.
“It always surprises me,” says Ms. Youngblood, “that we expect people to know how to achieve overall well-being. [Yet] we’ve given them very little opportunity to know, understand, and practice the things that might be beneficial.”
For a third example, we turned to the very same Al Lewis who basically finds fault in everything workplace wellness and challenged him to come up with one. Surely, in all his travels, he had found a single program—just one—that worked. He thought for a minute and then said: “Wait a sec! The one I’m in, Boston College’s, is great. They actually screen me according to guidelines. I mean, that shouldn’t win them a Nobel Prize, but in this industry, it does.
“Plus, when I go in for my screen—every three years, just like the guidelines say—I’m always trying to find fault, but instead I am amazed at how good the guidance is. Totally up to date on carbs and fat, no telling me to get a PSA test or other inappropriate interventions, and knowledgeable staff. And no wonder. They get their program from Harvard Pilgrim Health Care, the top-ranked health plan in the country basically every year, according to the National Committee for Quality Assurance.”
Part III
Doing It Right
As we say on the Health Rosetta Institute website, “Health care is already fixed. Join us to scale the fixes.” Fortunately, whether private or public sector, rural or urban, small or large, employers in virtually every corner of the country have proven that they can reduce spending by 20 percent or more compare to average employers while significantly improving benefits programs. In this part of the book, we lay out the most important building blocks and mindsets. We explore how a transparent benefits advisor or consultant relationship and independent claims administrator is often the best path to capturing the greatest value from your health dollars.
“Employees are our greatest asset” is a common expression, yet many companies don’t operate that way. In highly competitive markets, leading employers are creating competitive advantages through innovative benefits plans built around high-value components that are often ignored or underutilized, such as primary care and mental health. This section gives you the new mindset and tools to do this reset.
Chapter 9
You Run a Health Care Business Whether You Like It or Not.
Here’s How to Make It Thrive.
Warren Buffett said it all: “GM is a health and benefits company with an auto company attached.” In fact, it spends more on health care than steel, just as Starbucks spends more on health care than coffee beans.
For most companies, health care is the second largest expense after payroll. This puts you in the health care business.
So, how’s your health care business doing?
That’s the first question the COO of a large private equity fund’s health care benefits purchasing group asks when he sits down with the CEO of a newly acquired company, say a manufacturer. Naturally, the CEO will look puzzled. The COO will then show that the company has, for example, 4,200 members enrolled in their health plan and spends the typical $10,000 per year per member for health care. He then asks “How’s your $42 million health care business?”
That’s when the light bulb goes on, said the COO.
A Shift in Mindset
As we have seen, most companies don’t apply the s
ame level of care to their health care spending that they do to other large expenditures. Estimates of fraud, waste, and abuse in health care range from a low of 30 percent (Institute of Medicine) to over 50 percent (PwC) but are little known among employers.95 Note that these are the same companies that often manage other major budget items down to the hundredths of a percent, yet accept annual 5 to 20 percent health care cost increases. In most cases, they have an overburdened, outgunned HR leader who is overseeing the health care spend with little or no analytic capabilities.
The reality is most companies wouldn’t hire their present benefits leader to run a multimillion dollar million business unit or product. So why do they run a multimillion dollar benefits spend?
So, what’s different about employers who are winning the battle to slay the health care cost beast? It’s all about mindset. It’s about waking up to the understanding that improving the value of health benefits is the best way to improve the well-being of their employees while boosting the company’s bottom line—then committing to that path.
In virtually every case, the COO said, employers who have seen the light and taken action find their health care costs flatten or decline a bit while other employers continue to face ever-increasing health care costs. Soon, they’re spending 20 percent less on health benefits per capita. Eventually, the most successful are spending 40-55 percent less. Plus, the financial and other advantages of waking up compound over time. As each year passes, the gap between wide-awake employers and those accepting the status quo grows.
As I’ve traveled to every corner of the country, I’ve seen wide-awake employers—large and small, rural and urban, public and private sector—who refuse to buy into what I believe has become the biggest lie in health care: that health care costs can’t be controlled.
However, it’s not just about costs. We’ve long heard CEOs state that employees are their most important asset. These wide-awake employers, from IBM to a small poultry processor in rural Wisconsin, have shifted their benefits mindset to match. Instead of looking at health benefits as a soft HR benefit, they now see them as investments in health and well-being that are strategic inputs to their supply chain and P&L. They manage health benefits programs accordingly.
Fair Trade for Health Care
In choosing care provider partners, wide-awake employers understand that the well-being of caregivers has a direct impact on the care of their employees. It’s enlightened self-interest to make sure that physicians and other clinical staff are not abused by administrators, working conditions, compensation models, unbridled profit incentives, and other challenges that are sadly, very common. If the people running the show exhibit disdain for their own staff, how do you think they’ll treat yours?
If you’ve ever bought Fair Trade coffee, you’ve probably done so in a deliberate effort to say no to products produced by child or slave labor, or whose owners run roughshod over the environment. I’m proposing that you likewise insist that health care organizations exhibit fair and ethical treatment of clinicians and patients before you become one of the latter. Here’s what Fair Trade for health care should include.
•Transparent prices. Upfront pricing should be readily available without having to subscribe to a special service. Hospitals, physicians, and labs should have continued freedom to set their own prices, but predatory pricing, with a different rate for each person, is out of the question.
•Bundled prices. Imagine buying a car and getting a bill for the transmission six months later. You’d be livid, yet this sort of thing happens all the time in the health care industry. A transparent price must include the full bundle of services that wrap around it. This is the norm for the transparent medical markets we discuss later in this book. While not every last area of health care will fit into a bundle, it’s broader than you might imagine. For example, the University of Oklahoma’s Harold Hamm Diabetes Center has an all-in bundle for diabetes management (for different severity levels).
•A culture of safety. Given that preventable medical deaths are a leading cause of death in America and that medical errors bring untold misery to millions of patients every year, one of the best ways to identify a safe hospital is to ask nurses if they would want a family member to receive care in their facility and, if so, by which unit-level team. In fact, the Joint Commission (the U.S. accrediting body for hospitals) strongly recommends that hospitals measure safety culture, and most do, but this information is not shared with the public. Leapfrog Group safety scores is a great source for assessing this.
•Staff treatment: Physicians and nurses are suffering from record levels of suicide and burnout. To think this doesn’t affect the quality of care they provide is naive. Research shows that patient outcomes are correlated with how a hospital treats its clinical staff.96
•Ethics-based organizations. There must be a focus on patient-reported outcomes. That is, patients want outcomes like living without pain or playing a sport—not just having a successful surgery, especially if it would have been better to avoid in the first place. Virginia Mason Hospital & Medical Center in Seattle, a forward-looking organization, has been candid in admitting that, at one time, 90 percent of its spinal procedures were of no help.97 While some worry about rationing care, the volume-driven reimbursement system has always rationed choices by pushing towards costly, invasive treatment options. Top-performing, value-based primary care organizations tell us that patients virtually always choose the least invasive treatment option first—but only if they’re told about sound alternatives to expensive and overused treatments and tests. Equipping patients to become active partners in their own care is the sign of an ethical organization. So are ethical business practices, which definitely don’t include intimidating doctors into relationships with a local hospital, an unfortunate common practice.
•Data liquidity. Care teams do their best work when they have the most complete view of a patient’s health status. Anything less comes with an increased risk of harm. Likewise, your employees should have easy access to their own information in a secure, patient-controlled data repository—including the right to contribute their own data or take it elsewhere.
Two Stories
In the 2000s, IBM made a mindset shift about employee welfare and decided to integrate its health services. According to Paul Gundy, MD, and Martin Sepulveda, MD—the physicians who led these efforts—the company realized they were competing against giants like WiPro and Infosys from India, which have much lower cost structures. IBM would have to tackle the cost side of the equation, but they also saw that they could gain a strategic advantage if they had much higher-performing teams. Accordingly, they put a particular focus on the fitness, productivity, and resilience of their workforce.
Sepulveda explained to me their revelation that indiscriminate provision of health care services—absent efforts to help people understand how to use those services—leads to voracious appetites from both patients and health care providers for services that add little value but add a lot of cost to the individual, company, and society.
It dawned on him that if they were going to develop a worldwide health care strategy, they would have to build on universal values. People everywhere value health, access, receiving health care, and relationships in health care. It was striking to Sepulveda how important the relationship is between the person receiving care and the person delivering the care. What people understand and what they are willing to do is greatly influenced by that interaction. The ideal setting, he saw, is a full-function primary care setting that includes behavioral health and health coaching.
The challenge for a global leader like IBM was to develop a strategy that would work in vastly different environments: in rapid-growth countries with poor infrastructure, in a socialized country like France, and in a private insurance country like the U.S. They decided that, all other things being equal, they would put a third of their health care chips on prevention, a third on primary care, and a third on employee engagement with (and accountability
for) their own health and with the health care system. The result is that IBM has built itself a competitive advantage with a lower cost structure and a higher-performing workforce.
On the other end of the spectrum with a very similar success story is Brakebush, a small poultry processor in rural Wisconsin with 1700 employees, many of whom are at high risk for injuries due to the nature of their job. For Brakebush, the wake-up call was a realization that they were pouring major resources into one of health care’s most notorious money pits: musculoskeletal (MSK) procedures based on no scientific evidence, which in most cases provide less value than physical therapy (PT).98
They took a multipronged approach to eliminating the waste, including allocating resources to address and mitigate physical risks in their plants, hiring an on-site PT specialist to provide MSK care in a value-based fee model, and creating a new health care coordinator position to help employees navigate the health system. Brakebush now incentivizes employees who do need surgery to use designated centers of excellence for procedures that come with an upfront bundled price and warranty. They also use price transparency tools, a health care concierge, and health coaching. And in 2016, the company opened a health center that provides primary care, personal training, and a gym—at no cost to employees.
Sounds like a big investment, right? And yet Brakebush paid less for health care in 2016 than it did in 2014. It now spends 50 percent less than average for companies their size on MSK disorders, saving $1 million a year on just this one area.
What to Look For in a Health Plan Administrator
Obviously, you can’t ask most HR benefits directors to pull off this kind of culture change. What you need is a sophisticated health administrator, analogous to the person who’s administering your 401(k). This is someone whose skills and experience are commensurate with the magnitude of your investment in health benefits and the level of fiduciary responsibility it carries.