How to incentivize your employees to make cost-effective health care choices

Here’s how you can engage your employees to make educated and effective decisions within their plan.

Convincing an employee to make a decision that helps their employer win is much easier when the employee wins, too. (Photo: Shutterstock)

Even a great benefits plan won’t serve your business to its full potential if your employees aren’t using the tools provided to them. Employers have a wealth of opportunities to improve their business and their employees’ experience if they adopt an innovative plan, but the efficacy of these tools rely on employee engagement. Incentivizing your employees to be active participants in their benefits plan maximizes their experience as patients while helping the business save money and grow.

Here’s how you can engage your employees to make educated and effective decisions within their plan.

Pass on the savings

Convincing an employee to make a decision that helps their employer win is much easier when the employee wins, too. A study by Blue Cross Blue Shield found that knee surgeries in the United States cost an average of $31,124. However, cost variations are so extreme that the same surgery could cost significantly less (or more) depending on the region. By offering your employee a $3,500 bonus for driving sixty miles to a location that charges $15,000 for the same surgery while offering the same quality care, you could potentially save over $12,500.

Related: Walmart adds financial incentive for employees who visit ‘featured providers’

By passing on the rewards to your employees, you give them a reason to go out of their way to lower costs for you without putting their own care at risk. In many cases, this can actually lead to a better experience overall for the employee.

Make quality care more convenient

In order to improve the patient experience, the accessibility of high-quality care is just as important as its availability. A study published by the Public Library of Science (PLOS) found that over 20 percent of medical procedures were potentially unnecessary, adding up to what the Institute of Medicine estimates to be $210 billion in wasted medical expenses per year.

Many patients could avoid invasive and expensive procedures by asking other doctors for alternative options, but a 2005 Gallup poll found that 49 percent of patients “never” seek a second opinion, while only 3 percent of patients “always” do. Offering an automatic second opinion option–in which a doctor reviews a patient’s records and gives them an opinion online –serves to help you and your employees in multiple ways:

Offering an automatic second opinion requires little to no work from your employees while offering the possibility of eliminating an expensive medical claim.

Put their health care in their hands

The key to getting your employees to engage more with their benefits plan isn’t to force them in one direction, but to offer them multiple options so they can take control of their own benefits. This not only makes them feel empowered, but also lets them know that you, as their employer, are looking out for their best interests.

Some areas in which you can give your employees more authority in their plan are:

The more you involve your employees with the choices available in their benefits plan, the more likely they are to make informed choices that give more to themselves and your business.

Engaged employees, educated solutions

Giving your employees cash, convenience, and choices can help give them the incentive they need to help you make the most out of your benefits plan. Educating your workers about the options they have and then empowering them to make decisions that are better for them and the company can transform your benefits package from a plan into a strategic tool to help your business grow.

Jim Blachek flipped his traditional brokerage model in 2017 to focus solely on consulting and building value based health plans. In 2019 he co-founded a consulting only firm Dynamic Benefit Solutions and founded Local Script a transparent pharmacy and marketing organization focused on reducing employer and employee costs while supporting the local community.


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