Employers Who Had Fifty or More
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Center for Health Information and Analysis
?ron Boros Executive Director
Employers Who Had Fifty or More Employees Using MassHealth, Commonwealth Care, or the Health Safety Net in State Fiscal Year 2010
February 2013
This report was developed by the Division of Health Care Finance and Policy and published by the Center for Health Information and Analysis.
Center for Health Information and Analysis
Table of Contents
Executive Summary
1
Key Findings
2
Background and Introduction
3
Methodological Summary
5
Findings and Analysis
6
Appendices
Appendix 1: About Massachusetts Public Health Care Programs
9
Appendix 2: Top 50 Massachusetts Employers with Fifty or More
Employees Using Public Health Programs in FY 2010, by Number of
Employees and Employer Size
10
Appendix 3: Technical Notes on Methodology
12
Appendix 4: Glossary of Terms
17
Employers Who Had Fifty or More Employees Using MassHealth, Commonwealth Care, or the Health Safety Net in State Fiscal Year 2010
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Center for Health Information and Analysis
Executive Summary
As part of the effort to provide information on health care access in the Commonwealth, the Division of Health Care Finance and Policy (the Division) produces a report identifying employers in the Commonwealth with fifty or more employees receiving health services through one or more of the state's publicly subsidized health care programs (MassHealth, Commonwealth Care (CommCare), and the Health Safety Net (HSN)). The Division releases this report, referred to as the Fifty-Plus Report, in response to Section 304 of Chapter 149 of the Acts of 2004.
This report presents findings from the Division's analyses on employers in the Commonwealth who had fifty or more of their employees use public health care programs during the 2010 State Fiscal Year (SFY), which covered the period July 1, 2009 through June 30, 2010. In addition to the number of employees and dependents who accessed a public health care program during the period, the report also estimates cost to the state as a result of these individuals and their family members accessing MassHealth, CommCare, or the HSN.
Three main methodological notes must be made regarding the 2010 Fifty-Plus Report and how it differs from previous reports.1 First, the 2010 report does not present data and findings from previous years. For 2010, the Division applied a methodology for determining membership in publicly subsidized health care programs that differs from methods applied to analyses in previous years. This improved methodology produces more refined statistics, which are presented and explained in the Findings and Analysis section of the report. As part of the refinements in methodology, members who are eligible for a program but do not have attributable charges are not included in the counts, except where noted. Comparing results that use this methodology and the previous methodology would produce unreliable trends.
Second, to address the issues associated with difficult to verify self-reported data (when individuals note on their applications for public assistance that they work for a particular employer), the 2010 Fifty-Plus Report is based only on employment and wage data provided by and verified with the Department of Revenue (DOR), MassHealth, and the Health Connector (Connector).
Finally, for the 2010 report, the Division's improved methodology now includes unique or distinct individuals across programs and also for all combined programs. These methodological decisions improve the integrity and accuracy of the data presented. However, as a result, the distinct count of employees and dependents for all programs is not necessarily the sum of total employee counts for MassHealth, CommCare, and HSN.
Employees and dependents of Fifty-Plus employers may have accessed a publicly subsidized program for a number of reasons, including: a) they were ineligible for the insurance package offered by their employer; b) they worked for an employer that did not offer health insurance at all; or c) they opted not to enroll in an employer-sponsored health insurance presumably due to affordability concerns. The present data, however, do not allow for distinguishing among these reasons.
1 See Appendix 2 for a full summary of methodological changes.
Employers Who Had Fifty or More Employees Using MassHealth, Commonwealth Care, or the Health Safety Net in State Fiscal Year 2010
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Center for Health Information and Analysis
Key Findings
? During SFY2010, 1,548 employers in the Commonwealth had fifty or more employees (and their dependents) access health care services through MassHealth, CommCare, or HSN.
? Overall, approximately 362,000 distinct employees of fifty-plus employers (and their dependents)
accessed health care
services through a state-funded public health care program,
Fig 1: Employees and dependents of fifty-plus employers who accessed a public health care program in 2010, by program
primarily through
MassHealth. ? The Commonwealth
400,000 361,725
spent nearly $760 million on health care
300,000
264,790
services for employees
and dependents of fifty-plus employers in
200,000
SFY2010; 45% of this
amount went towards care received by
100,000
79,014
53,325
dependents.
? Seventy-four percent (74%) of the total
0 All Programs MassHealth CommCare
HSN
cost was attributable
to employees and
dependents that used
the MassHealth program, with Commonwealth Care and the HSN, respectively, accounting for
19% and 7% of all costs.
Employers Who Had Fifty or More Employees Using MassHealth, Commonwealth Care, or the Health Safety Net in State Fiscal Year 2010
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Center for Health Information and Analysis
Background and Introduction
Section 304 of Chapter 149 of the Acts of 2004 requires the Massachusetts Executive Office of Health and Human Services (EOHHS) to produce an annual report on employers in the Commonwealth with at least fifty employees using public health care programs (the Fifty-Plus Report). This requirement was part of the state's efforts to change how health care services are paid for in Massachusetts, efforts that culminated in passage and implementation of Chapter 58 of the Acts of 2006 (Massachusetts health care reform law). The Massachusetts Division of Health Care Finance and Policy (the Center) is the EOHHS agency responsible for producing the Fifty-Plus Report.
Initially, the Fifty-Plus Report provided policymakers in Massachusetts with key data on how employees of large firms (firms with at least 50 employees) access public health care programs. Policymakers used data from the Fifty-Plus Report, among many other sources, to craft a `shared responsibility' approach to increasing health coverage, where individuals, government, and employers are all required to play a role in providing health insurance coverage to Massachusetts residents. Today, in addition to policy-makers, stakeholders such as employers, labor unions, and researchers rely on the Fifty-Plus Report for data and analyses on utilization and financing of publicly subsidized health insurance programs by employees and dependents of large firms.2
Several provisions in Chapter 58 act as incentives for employers to offer and maintain health insurance coverage for employees. The Fair Share Contribution (FSC) provision, for example, requires all employers with 11 or more full-time equivalent employees (FTEs) to either make a "fair and reasonable" contribution toward health care costs of their full-time employees or to pay a Fair Share Contribution liability.3 Other policy tools such as Chapter 58's Section 125 Plan requirement and the Free Rider Surcharge also encourage employers to maintain coverage for their workers.4
Chapter 58 has been successful; since passage and implementation of the law, more than 98% of Massachusetts residents and over 99% of children in the state have health insurance coverage.5 In addition, employers in the Commonwealth have strengthened their role in the provision of health insurance coverage. For example, in 2010, 77% of Massachusetts employers offered health insurance to their employees, compared to 69% of employers who did so in 2001. Furthermore, over 97% of large firms in the Commonwealth made health insurance coverage available to their employees in 2010.6 Overall, 79% of insured Massachusetts residents under the age of 65 maintain health insurance coverage through their employer.7
2 For this report, large firm is defined as an employer with at least 50 employees who utilize public health care programs. See the glossary of terms for more definitions on employers, employees, and dependents, and their usage in this report.
3 The FSC regulation (114.5 CMR 16.00) applies two conditions in its determination of whether an employer is making a "fair and reasonable" contribution. First, for an employer with between 11 and 50 FTEs, the employer must offer at least a 33% contribution toward all full-time employee premiums or cover 25% of all full-time employees. The second condition, which applies to employers with 50 or more employees, requires the employer to contribute at least 33% toward an employee's premium and cover 25% of all full-time employees. Alternatively, an employer with 50 or more FTEs can satisfy the requirement by covering 75% of all full-time employees.
4 The adoption of Section 125 plans by employers allows employees to pay their contributions towards health insurance using pretax income. The Free Rider Surcharge penalizes employers with 11 or more FTEs that do not offer Section 125 plans. An employer with 11 or more FTEs who fails to meet the Section 125 Plan requirement may be subject to a Free Rider Surcharge if a worker or dependents of the worker access medical care through the state's Health Safety Net (HSN) program.
5 "Health Insurance Coverage in Massachusetts: Results from the 2008-2010 Massachusetts Health Insurance Surveys." Division of Health Care Finance and Policy, 2010.
6 Division of Health Care Finance and Policy (DHCFP). 2010 Massachusetts Employer Survey. Online at .
7 DHCFP. Health Care in Massachusetts: Key Indicators (November 2010). Online at dhcfp.
Employers Who Had Fifty or More Employees Using MassHealth, Commonwealth Care, or the Health Safety Net in State Fiscal Year 2010
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