EMPLOYER INITIATIVES
Very effective if used properly, these panels are not yet widespread. However, that could change as industrial customers demand more input.
Whether you’re the physician administrator for a large group practice or the CEO of a multihospital health system, when dozens of letters from large employers begin to cross your desk asking you to reopen negotiations with a managed care plan, you’re likely to listen.
That’s the thinking of a coalition of businesses working with Aetna. The employers want to make sure that Aetna and providers work out their differences so that the networks of doctors and hospitals their employees use remain stable.
“If you end up sending 50 to 70 letters, providers are going to pay attention,” says Darrell Sawyer, manager of benefits administration at Smurfit-Stone Container, a packaging manufacturer based in Chicago.
Sawyer is a member of the executive committee of the Aetna Customer Advisory Group, an independent organization made up mostly of human resources professionals from about 90 companies that contract with Aetna. The group meets twice a year with Aetna executives, and the letter-writing effort, which companies take on when Aetna’s negotiations with doctors and hospitals stall, is one example of how they work together.
Employer representatives on Aetna’s panel and other health plan advisory boards also are offering their help, ideas, and opinions on insurers’ ventures into disease management, technology expenditures, new product development, and more. By participating, employers get access to top health plan executives, early news as to what the company is up to, and the chance to learn from other employers. For their part, managed care organizations gain a direct line of communication with the companies that purchase their products.
“It is very expensive to win and lose customers, so it’s smart business for insurers to listen to these groups,” says Linda Havlin, a Chicago-based partner with Mercer Human Resources Consulting.
Employer advisory panels aren’t widespread, but their numbers are likely to grow, Havlin contends. “These groups can be very effective if they are used appropriately. And, it’s a message from the health plan that says, ‘We continually want to get customer input as to how to best serve client and employee needs.'”
Closer cooperation
Business leaders would welcome more opportunities to work with health plans in this way, says Gregg O. Lehman, PhD, president and CEO of the Washington-based National Business Coalition on Health. NBCH polled 90 business coalitions nationally on whether its members participate in advisory panels or boards of MCOs. Ten percent responded; of those, just one could identify a member company that had a representative sitting on the board of a managed care organization (see “Employer Rep More Than Just a Token,” on page 40).
“That’s going to change,” Lehman says. Because a greater number of businesses today are gathering data on health plan quality issues before contracting with insurers, employers and insurers are working more closely than ever. “It’s a matter of time before coalition executives will be asked to sit on employer panels to actually advise health plans.”
The customer advisory boards at Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Virginia, formerly Trigon Blue Cross Blue Shield, were redesigned about four years ago to include employers of all sizes, from small-business purchasers with up to 14 employees to companies with thousands of workers.
“We look upon the boards as standing focus groups,” says Donna DeWitt-McGee, Anthem’s director of market analysis. “We want to hear their thoughts on our products and policies.” The company has two boards, one for each side of the state, which meet two to three times a year and discuss everything from covering genetic testing to how to improve an explanation-of-benefits form and what features should be on Anthem’s Web site.
“I feel that my employees have a voice,” says Laura Dietrick, assistant director of benefits at the University of Richmond, which has 1,400 employees.
The Aetna Customer Advisory Group has spearheaded many changes at Aetna over the years, says Russell D. Fisher, senior vice president of national accounts and Aetna global benefits. The group, founded by employers, suggested that Aetna go to an electronic referral process in its HMO, for example, and has given input on how to structure a new consumer-driven product. Aetna’s top management, including Chairman John W. Rowe, MD, and President Ronald Williams, have attended the group’s meetings.
“It’s really helped us understand what we need to do and how we need to change as we go forward,” Fisher says.
In working with employers, however, managed care organizations have to make sure that communication is productive and they have to resist the urge to turn meetings into a sales pitch, says Mercer’s Havlin. “Insurers really have to think about where employers can provide input best and what tools they need to comment on the effectiveness of how the plan is running. You don’t want a meeting to just be a general gripe session. It’s hard to manage these groups when their conversation is based on innuendo or the last person who walked in their office with a claims complaint.”
It is important to keep the dialog focused but open, agrees Anthem’s Dewitt-McGee. “We try to make it free-form enough that we can allow for some very valuable discussion, but we do try not to get on specific claims issues or anything along that line.”
Sharing broader health care ideas with other human resources professionals and learning how they’ve met challenges also is important, says Smurfit-Stone’s Sawyer. “The most significant thing for me is the exchange with other members.”
It’s great, Dietrick says, “just to be able to sit in a room with other employers and hear what they have to say.”

Paul Lendner ist ein praktizierender Experte im Bereich Gesundheit, Medizin und Fitness. Er schreibt bereits seit über 5 Jahren für das Managed Care Mag. Mit seinen Artikeln, die einen einzigartigen Expertenstatus nachweisen, liefert er unseren Lesern nicht nur Mehrwert, sondern auch Hilfestellung bei ihren Problemen.