Which sounds worse: getting shortchanged by a cashier at the grocery store or losing your life savings to an uninformed Bernie Madoff-type investment? The answer is obvious. Still, it’s a good metaphor for how to manage your healthcare investment and, more importantly, the glaring flaws in how healthcare is administered and delivered.
First, some background. The Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) was designed to protect employee benefits, including health plans. The person exercising authority over a health plan is a “fiduciary” and legally bound to act in the best interests of the participants.
But according to a recent article, chief financial officers (CFOs) are facing millions of dollars in personal liability suits, due to a lack of “fiduciary oversight.” Whether the cause is negligence, omission, or imprudent management, the result isn’t good: a potential lawsuit for the organization and/or executive, mishandled or wasted money, and shortchanged employees. Throw the Department of Labor into the mix (they’ve been keeping a close eye on 401k plan fiduciaries in recent years), and the choice is cut-and-dried: most credit unions and cooperatives need to up their game.
Here are the five biggest mistakes CFOs make when designing, purchasing, and managing their health plans.
- Taking a gamble.
CFOs are gambling with the organization’s healthcare by taking more risk than they should. Why would any organization risk $250,000 or $1 million when they can reduce their exposure to less than $8,000?
It’s even more shocking at large credit unions and cooperatives when the bottom line is exposed to unnecessary health care overspending. Healthcare managers wager hundreds of thousands of dollars by ignoring reducible risk and the mistakes hurt the bottom line. C-suite executives are surprised when I explain why “best practices” don’t work—until I show how much money is trapped inside their healthcare budget.
- Surrendering responsibility to unqualified departments and non-P&L managers.
I always ask CFOs one simple question: “By a show of hands, who would hire an HR-level executive to lead a $100 million division of your organization?” No CFO has ever raised their hand.
Yet, the healthcare investment is often treated as an operating expense that’s delegated to operations managers who don’t have the time or expertise to make the best-informed decisions. Too often, these decisions end up in the hands of brokers who, most often, will take a boilerplate path of least resistance by recommending ‘best practices’ that only major in minor outcomes.
- Not all healthcare costs are created equal.
For many, health-plan management falls outside standard business supply chain cost control strategies. So, shift perspectives: negotiate the highest utility for every dollar invested in the healthcare supply chain. Hospitals, outpatient surgery centers, physicians and pharmacy account for over 90 percent of claims, and all can be negotiated. Successful cost reductions must focus on four areas: wasteful spending, excessive fees, poor quality, and non-transparent pricing.
Who in their right mind would shop at Target and fill up two carts, then leave knowing they’ll receive a bill 30 days later and only when the bill comes be told how much everything costs? Well, that’s how most healthcare works.
- Not involving senior executives.
I like to ask CFOs: “Which two ‘best practices’ are most effective in reducing the frequency and severity of your claims this year?” The CFO soon realizes that despite following a legacy of best practices, this path has resulted in negligible outcomes and left hundreds of thousands of dollars on the table.
The CFO must be directly involved and recognize that healthcare investment is a capital allocation strategy—it requires the supervision of an executive with P&L responsibility.
- Not knowing what you’re paying for.
Most CFOs don’t know whether their medical plan pays retail, wholesale or institutional charges. Like with a 401k, it’s a CFO’s fiduciary responsibility to know their healthcare broker’s and consultant’s total compensation.
It’s imperative to ask the right questions to uncover where your dollars are going. Familiarize yourself with fees, commissions, bonuses, overrides, incentives, profit sharing, contingent fees, expense reimbursement allowances, or performance-based compensation—because they all add up.
Being uninformed can cost your organization a lot of money, or worse. When explaining in court that you consistently supervised and overpaid by as much as 3x for a poor-performing, low-quality medical plan, ignorance is no defense.
So, there you have it: five common mistakes to avoid when buying healthcare. Take ownership, talk to an expert, and educate yourself on sourcing the best solution. You really can’t afford not to.
John Harris is a healthcare expert who reverse-engineers the healthcare supply chain for mid-size credit unions and cooperatives (100-500 employees) to save them millions.