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College collaboration leads to self-insurance savings

Oct 12, 2015
Worcester Business Journal
Worcester Business Journal

From the October 12, 2015 issue of Worcester Business Journal

By SAM BONACCI | OCTOBER 12, 2015

One year ago, when Worcester Polytechnic Institute dove into the high-risk, high-reward world of self-insurance, it hoped the gamble would pay off enough to keep tuition in check. Luckily, WPI had friends. WPI joined a new collaborative of colleges and universities – called Educators Health LLC, or edHEALTH – that has allowed small- to mid-sized schools to pool their self-insurance efforts and keep potential outlandish costs in check. The result over that first year was less risk and more savings.

Ditching full-coverage from insurance companies is typically a luxury reserved for large companies. Firms like Hopkinton computer giant EMC can customize their coverage while retaining money unspent on claims that would normally be profits for insurance companies. With a large pool of employees, they can spread the risk of rare, multi-million-dollar claims.

WPI, with its 1,053 employees, was better off than most small employers entering self-insurance, but by joining the edHEALTH collaborative with a pool of 8,900 employees of 11 schools, including Boston College, it had significantly more negotiating power.

The organization was launched in 2013 with the singular purpose of helping schools self-insure. The greatest portion of WPI's expenses are salaries and benefits, and the school is trying to keep that line item in check in order to keep tuition costs as low as possible, said Jeff Solomon, WPI's executive vice president and chief financial officer.

"(Self-insuring) would take some pressure off the revenue side," Solomon said. "We can keep tuition lower if we can manage our costs." While declining to provide specifics, Solomon said he was very pleased with the savings self-insuring provided WPI in its first year.

Going it alone, together 

The difficulty in setting up self-insurance as well as administrating it has long been the province of only the largest institutions. As many as 58.5 percent of all workers with health coverage receive it from organizations that are self-insuring – according to the most recent 2011 data from the Employee Benefits Research Institute – but those are mostly employees of companies with 1,000 or more people.

Only 12 percent of employees of companies with 50 or fewer workers receive their health coverage through self-insurance plans. edHEALTH gives access to schools which previously would have been too small to self-insure, said Tracy Hassett, the president and CEO of edHEALTH. The sheer number of employees allows for the negotiation of better rates all around.

Pooling buying power is nothing new, said Solomon. WPI uses similar techniques to purchase workers' compensation insurance and overall university commercial insurance. In joining edHEALTH in 2014, the organization relinquished its fully-insured status and took on the responsibility of covering its employees' claims. While this is seamless for employees, it required behind-the-scenes work with actuaries to calculate cost and coordination with an insurance company that takes on the daily administration of claims and allows the organization access to their coverage network.

Harvard Pilgrim Health Care – edHEALTH's third-party administrator – processes claims and bills the schools. It also serves as an important barrier between the employer and individual employee data. "For the employees it was seamless. They still get their Harvard Pilgrim card and get to see their doctor," said Hassett, WPI's former vice president of human resources. "That was critical to us because we didn't want any of our employees to see a change in coverage or change their doctors."

Read the article - EdHealth+WBJ.pdf