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Don't Wait for Reform; Prepare for the Future Now

05/27/2010
by Bryan K. Brenner
CEO & Consultant, FirstPerson
President Barack Obama's ongoing push for health care reform is making one thing clear: Change is coming to America's health care system.

Certainly, the scope of reform is not worked out, but the debate has progressed far enough that change is inevitable. Unfortunately, as politicians wrestle with our health care future, consumers and business operators must live in the present.

With all of this uncertainty, businesses might be tempted to bide their time until the outcome is clear. But that’s neither prudent nor necessary. We can address the realities of today even as the policies of tomorrow take shape.

The stakes are high. Proposed changes will affect health and pocketbooks. Health care recently overtook housing as the largest chunk of Americans’ spending, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. And over the past decade, the Kaiser Family Foundation notes, the average premiums for employer-provided family coverage increased 131 percent while workers’ earnings increased 38 percent.

Even as businesses and employees deal with these costs, we face a parallel issue: roughly 46 million uninsured Americans. These millions, the Kaiser Family Foundation notes, include a broad spectrum of Americans – perhaps most notably, people who are ineligible for coverage due to pre-existing conditions or an inability to pay premiums.

Predicting the outcome of the reform debate is impossible. Still, we see themes that consumers and business operators should accept in order to prepare for the post-reform world.

Change is coming. We’re too far into the process to retreat completely now.

Employees will have more options. The vision is of a more open health-care marketplace.

Employers will play a key role. The workplace will be pivotal to the provision, distribution and communication of health care coverage.

Employers have a vested interest in employees’ well-being. Lost productivity due to illness and injury costs millions of dollars each year.

Employers will be judged by benefits. Workers will continue to judge employers on the basis of benefits.

Employees will want information from employers. The infrastructure employers offer for information and assistance is too valuable to abandon.

 
Read the full article from Inside INdiana Business.


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