Paperback(Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1979)

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Overview

The springboard for this sixth volume in the Industry and Health Care series was a conference sponsored by the Center for Industry and Health Care of Boston University on June 9 and 10, 1978. That conference had a gradual genesis. Over a year ago we spent some time with Kevin Stokeld of Deere and Company and heard his views on self-insurance and self-administration as one device for a corporation to achieve better management control of its health benefit. More recent discussions with representatives of American Telephone and Telegraph Company and other corporations made it increasingly clear to us that management's need for data to monitor the use of employee health benefits was emerging as a critical policy issue. Subsequent meetings with executives at John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company in Boston and Mobil Oil Corporation in New York, among others, convinced us that simple answers would be elusive or inadequate and that there was a need for an objective and careful look at the evolving relationships between employee health benefits, claims administration, health services utilization, and corpo­ rate health care cost containment programs. Since self-funding and particularly self-administration represent a fundamental change in the traditional insurance relationship, the conference was convened to explore the advantages and disadvantages of self-insurance for employee health benefits, with some attention to claims production but with special emphasis on the originating question of data for effective management of an employee health benefit.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780387903859
Publisher: Springer New York
Publication date: 04/02/1979
Series: Springer Series on Industry and Health Care , #6
Edition description: Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1979
Pages: 181
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.25(h) x (d)

Table of Contents

I. Context and Issues.- 1. Industry-Insurer Relationships—A Dynamic Interaction.- 2. A Spectrum of Financing and Administrative Alternatives.- 3. Shaving Percentage Points Off Administrative Costs.- 4. Using Claims Data to Contain Health Care Costs.- II. Purchaser Perspectives: Four Corporations.- 5. American Telephone and Telegraph Company.- 6. Mobil Oil Corporation.- 7. Deere and Company.- 8. Polaroid Corporation.- III. Administering the Benefit: Third-Party Views.- 9. Prudential Insurance Company of America.- 10. Blue Cross-Blue Shield of Greater New York.- 11. U. S. Administrators.- 12. United Mine Workers of America Health and Retirement Funds.- 13. United Storeworkers Security Plan.- IV. An Action Plan.- 14. Industry and Insurer Interventions to Control the Costs of Health Benefits.- 15. Legal Considerations.- Appendix: Conference Participants Quoted.
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