Taking the pulse of New Zealand's health insurance industry … · Anagha Pasche, John Smeed NZSA...

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Anagha Pasche, John SmeedNZSA Conference 2012

Taking the pulse of New Zealand's health insurance 

industry

Agenda

‐ NZ health insurance‐ Key issues facing health insurers‐ Selection of insurer responses‐ Discussion

Disclaimer

Thank you to Southern Cross for making data available for analysis.

Any opinions, errors or omission are our own.

NZ health insurance

NZ health systemEssential health service sectors

What do they provide? Who pays for these services?

Public Emergency care, most cancer care, specialist care and elective surgery in public hospitals; GP visits and prescriptions are subsidised to make them more affordable.

Tax payers

ACC Treatment and rehabilitation costs arising from accidents (whether at work, at home, on the sports field or as a result of a car accident).  

ACC levy payers (e.g. employers, employees, vehicle licensees etc)

Private  Elective surgery and cancer care in private facilities and private specialist care; the un‐subsidised portion of GP visits and prescriptions.

Private individuals, out of their own pockets or via health insurance

NZ health insurance market• largely a free market• no specific health insurance regulation or restrictions• no incentives for individuals or employers purchasing health 

insurance• ability to design and price insurance products• Exceptions to design and pricing of health insurance products

– The Human Rights Act– Certain medical services can only be provided by the public health 

system, including acute accident and emergency treatment and maternity care.

• Health insurer liable for reimbursement of the medical treatment costs not health of the insured

Health insurance typically covers elective surgery, specialist consultations and tests, day‐to‐day doctors’ or pharmacy costs.  

NZ health insurance market

0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

0200400600800

1,0001,200

2000

2001

2002

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2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

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2011

2012 Live

s In

sure

d (m

illio

n)

Pre

miu

m $

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ion

Total Premium and Lives InsuredYears Ended 30 June 2000 to 30 June 2012

Comprehensive Premium Major Medical Premium

Comprehensive Lives Major Medical Lives

Total Lives

NZ health insurance market

0%

20%

40%

60%

80%

100%

120%

2008 2009 2010 2011

Health Insurance Industry Profitability2008 - 2011

Claims Expenses Profit

Key issues facing health insurers

Key issues• Claim cost escalation and resulting issues of premium affordability.  

• Retaining better (priced) risks, as high levels of premium increase result in selective lapsation.  

• Low interest rates.• Volume of new sales.• Information imbalance between insurer and insured.• Increasing pressure on public sector health budget.• Ageing population and increasing life expectancy.• Technology improvements.• Changing health infra‐structure.

Claim cost escalation

0%

2%

4%

6%

8%

10%

12%

14%

16%

2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012

Cost of a hospital & specialist policy for a 65+ as a proportion of average weekly income 

Claim cost escalation

Retaining better (priced) risks

Retaining better (priced) risks

Low interest rates

0.00

1.00

2.00

3.00

4.00

5.00

6.00

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8.00

9.001/01/07

1/03/07

1/05/07

1/07/07

1/09/07

1/11/07

1/01/08

1/03/08

1/05/08

1/07/08

1/09/08

1/11/08

1/01/09

1/03/09

1/05/09

1/07/09

1/09/09

1/11/09

1/01/10

1/03/10

1/05/10

1/07/10

1/09/10

1/11/10

1/01/11

1/03/11

1/05/11

1/07/11

1/09/11

1/11/11

1/01/12

1/03/12

1/05/12

1/07/12

1/09/12

10 year government bond yields

United States

Germany

Italy

Spain

New Zealand

Volume of new sales

The impact of a reduction in sales volumes:• More difficult to recoup fixed acquisition costs, thereby impacting profitability.

• The duration in‐force of a health insurance portfolio will increase.

Information imbalance between insurer and insured

• Significant reduction in costs of genetic testing• Expect increased prevalence• If genetic testing is carried out, an insurer will want to minimise their risk by taking the information from the test into account.

• Potential increase the risk of non‐disclosure and information imbalance

• A principle of insurance is that risks are pooled

Increasing pressure on public sector health budget 

• Health insurance approximately 5% of total health expenditure

• Small change in public health spend can have a big impact of claims costs of health insurer 

Ageing population and increasing life expectancy

 ‐

 50,000

 100,000

 150,000

 200,000

 250,000

 300,000

 350,000

 400,000

0‐4Years

5‐9Years

10‐14Years

15‐19Years

20‐24Years

25‐29Years

30‐34Years

35‐39Years

40‐44Years

45‐49Years

50‐54Years

55‐59Years

60‐64Years

65‐69Years

70‐74Years

75‐79Years

80‐84Years

85‐89Years

90Yearsandover

New Zealand population projection by age band 2011‐2041

2011 Base

2041 Projection

Technology improvements

• Price and utilisation• Examples TAVI, PET/CT• Robotics

Changing health infra‐structure

• Shift out of traditional hospitals• E.g. day‐case surgery

Insurer responses

Insurer responses

Premium Increases

Consumer Driven

Partial self‐insurance

Downgrade paths

Insurer Directed

Contracting

Narrow network plans

Open referrals 

“Wellness”

No/Low Claim Reward

Consumer driven

Partial self‐insurance

Co‐payments

Excesses

Downgrade paths

Less cover with lower premium

Quickly back to where we started

Temporary relief only

Insurer directed responses• Panel of preferred providers for policyholders to choose from

• Higher co‐payments if you move outside that panel

Narrow network plans

• Approved providers for some services• No cover or capped reimbursement for non‐contracted providers

Contracting

• GP provides an open referral• Policyholder selects specialist from list provided by insurer

Open referral

• Objective is to improve overall health status and hence lower claims costs

• Disease Management to  health & fitness programsWellness

• Incentives for healthier lives to stay and reduce average claims costs

• 80% of claims cost are from 8% of members

No/low claim discounts

What are NZ insurers doing?

“Reasonable Charges” means charges for Healthcare Services determined by Southern Cross and based on Southern Cross’ ongoing review of Health Services Provider charges for a particular Healthcare Service, Southern Cross’ claims statistics and its knowledge of national and regional New Zealand health markets.

Is it working?

NZ Herald ‐ 16 November 2012

Bled dry trying to stay wellWhen budgeting for healthcare, more money is never enough

“Healthy is merely the slowest rate at which one can die”‐ Unknown

“Any intelligent fool can make things bigger and more complex... It takes a touch of genius ‐and a lot of courage to move in the opposite 

direction.”‐ Albert Einstein