Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
Arkansans paying larger slice for employer-provided health insurance
Compared to residents of other states, more Arkansans who get health insurance from their employer are spending a big slice of income on health costs, according to a report.
The data, which appears in a brief from health reform nonprofit group The Commonwealth Fund, are more indicative of low median incomes in the state than exposure to health expenses, said Arkansas Center for Health Improvement health policy director Craig Wilson.
The report released Thursday found 15.5% of Arkansans with employer-provided health insurance coverage spent 10% or more of their household income on premiums in 2016-2017.
That’s compared to 11.6% of people in the U.S. who spent that much.
During that same period, people with high outof-pocket costs, including expenses such as co-pays, medication, eyeglasses and other medical supplies totaling more than 10% of household income (or 5% for lower-income families), made up 9.8% of Arkansans, compared to 6.8% of Americans.
Researchers wrote in the years since the Affordable Care Act went into effect, people who have employer-provided coverage have received less attention.
They used data from the U.S. Census Bureau’s Current Population Survey to examine what people in that group, comprising 158 million Americans, were actually spending on health care.
“U.S. employers are sharing more of their costs with their workers, particularly through higher deductibles, copayments and coinsurance,” the report said.
“Recent research indicates that employer plan premiums and out-of-pocket costs, like those for prescription drugs, are eating up an increasing portion of household budgets.”
Five of eight states where more people paid high proportions of their incomes
toward health insurance premiums — Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina and Florida, as well as Arkansas — were in the South, the report said.
Nationwide, researchers estimated that 23.6 million Americans were cost-burdened with high premium contributions or high outof-pocket costs relative to their incomes.
About 4.1 million people struggled with both.
But Wilson said the actual median dollars spent in Arkansas don’t vary much from other states.
Arkansas households spent $825 on out-of-pocket costs between 2016-2017, the report said. The national median was $800.
Spending on premiums
also fell in line with national numbers, with Arkansans spending $2,136 in contributions, which was a bit less than the U.S. median of $2,200.
“I don’t think from these data we can make conclusions about whether Arkansas employers are contributing less than employers in other states, thereby exposing Arkansas employees to higher contributions,” Wilson wrote.
“Neither can we make conclusions about the level of exposure to out-of-pocket costs compared to employees in other states, i.e., cost-sharing protection.”
He said compared to other states, Arkansas has lower premium costs in the individual insurance markets and employer-sponsored coverage, which he attributed to lower provider reimbursement rates.