Taking the Leap
By
Are You Sure About Insurance for Medications?
Insurance was meant to cover the risk of unknown loss. Many Human Resource managers have implemented pharmacy insurance into their companies’ benefits because it has been engrained in them that insurance is what you do for your employees. However, in doing so, they are often creating a major roadblock to their company’s success. Many employers are finding insurance has made covering high-cost medications for their employees unstainable, causing businesses to struggle to stay afloat. This makes sense when you realize that medications are a very known and predictable expense.
The insurance administration is outsourced to pharmacy benefit managers “PBMs” causing employees to jump through hoops and fighting just to get medications crucial to a person’s survival, which sadly has become the ‘norm’. These hoops include things like the prior authorization process and dealing with the PBM owned pharmacy. Many employers have found that insurance essentially suffocates the process, causing frustration for them and their employees. Perhaps there is a better solution than using insurance for predictable expenses.
Navigating the Machine
No one enjoys navigating a bunch of inconvenient steps. PBMs claim to provide great value but time and time again, they have demonstrated through complicated processes that they neglect the care for the patients and their struggle to secure the medications they need.
Unless you have experienced the process, you may be unaware of the navigation that this takes. Many members are under the impression that there is no other way to attain their medications. As a society, we have been conditioned to believe the big machine known as insurance is the only way. Employers and employees are waving their white flags begging to be disrupted from their current situations. Fortunately, there is another way for those employers that decide to opt out of a system that was never built for them or their employees to find a better path.
We have been told that insurance is necessary to afford to seek care and manage disease. In my experience, using insurance creates so many headaches and barriers to accessing needed medications. Employers are at a crossroads of needing to find a way to offer a health plan that is sustainable and taking care of their most valued asset, their employees. But what can they do about it? By using the right tool for the problem, I have learned attaining high-cost medications becomes affordable and simple.
Breaking the Barrier
Suffering in silence is real. An absence of people complaining does not mean that the current process is working. My philosophy is that if you value your people, then you should provide them with something better.
SHARx understands that there is an issue. With positive disruption, employers have the option to stop using insurance for those expected expenses as it has proven to be an unsustainable solution. By partnering with SHARx, members gain access to prescriptions they need in a much simpler way, bypassing all the headaches that insurance causes. When selecting this avenue, insurance is no longer a barrier to getting medications.
There is always the option to stop covering drugs and never hire SHARx to help but is that any way for employers to show that they actually care about their people?
For Eric Hasty, CFO at Buchheit and longtime SHARx client, caring for his employees is top priority. He explains, “It would go contrary to our values as a company to not have an option for these folks. If we care about our team members, we put resources behind a health plan and we want it to work for them. This is a way that allows us to really benefit the team member even more and save those astronomical costs”. Hasty chose to opt out of the insanity and hire SHARx because he valued his company’s people. He took a stand, and his business and employees have benefitted tremendously.
A Biased Mentality
As a former broker, I will admit that we created the insurance bias and promoted the use of insurance. This bias causes employers to feel as though they need to have it. However, there comes a point in time when many employers find that they cannot sustain the rising cost of health care. They recognize that their original choice is not serving their business any longer. They have done the best they can with the plan they were given with the information they had.
Changing the Narrative
Expectations of our current systems have gotten us to where we are today, so it is important to define what is possible. It is possible to change the mindset that many of us have had about insurance up until now. I know because I lived in this world and played the game too. I realized that I was just as complacent as everyone else until I had a need for a high-cost medication for my children and had to face the music. I was unaware of the frustrations and limitations that were in place until I was forced to be a hyper user of health care. I recognized that the answer to my problem as the patient was not more insurance but rather less. It was a realization that changed the way I viewed the entire process.
Moving forward, we can change the way in which we think about solving some of these issues. What if you or your clients took a stand? What if you decided to join in with your peers in choosing to make a decision to do something different?
Prepping for the Future
Every year, employers must make tough decisions. Many choose to eat the cost of high-cost medications for their employees but at some point, everyone hits the end of the line. Unfortunately, the smaller you are the faster you hit that wall. Our goal at SHARx is to get rid of the headaches altogether.
For Brian Hall, CFO at McCray Lumber and SHARx client, the end of the line was quickly approaching, and he knew had to make a valuable change for his company. Hall encourages HR managers contemplating to take the leap as he states, “I always tell them that you never know when something is going to change. You need this, your company needs this. The only push back and the folks that don’t engage immediately are ones that don’t believe they have a problem, but they could have a problem next week. You never know when you are hiring people what kind of issues they have when they walk through the door or what you are getting and how they are going to affect your plan.” He emphasizes the importance of getting in front of the problem before it ends up being too late and companies are forced to shut their doors. Are you ready to take the leap?