Group health
insurance demographic is "Graying"
The
population in group health private insurance is
becoming older and wealthier at a rate greater than
the population overall, which could add pressure to
an already strained health insurance system,
according to a Yale School of Public Health study.
This trend makes it harder for health insurers to
pool risks since fewer younger people with lower
health costs are covered by these employment-based
plans, according to Patricia Keenan, Ph.D., lead
author of the article in Health Affairs and
assistant professor at the Yale School of Public
Health.
“Older, more affluent people are more likely to keep
their employer-based coverage as premiums rise while
others increasingly get public coverage or go
without altogether,” said Keenan. “Population aging
combined with declines from rising premiums could
further destabilize the employment-based health
coverage system.”
She said private coverage has been in a slow decline
since the late 1980s and younger and lower-income
groups have disproportionately lost coverage. Keenan
said even if the population with employment-based
coverage remains quite healthy, costs of coverage
could increase as the average age of people with
group coverage rises.
Although the main driver of rising premium costs is
ongoing changes in medical technology, Keenan said,
there is the possibility that population aging will
interact with ongoing differential declines in group
coverage to add to ongoing increases in premium
costs.
“In contrast to substantial policy attention to the
implications of population aging for Medicare and
Social Security, the potential consequences of
population aging for group health insurance have
received little consideration,” she said. “Well
before we see the effects of baby boomers'
retirement on Medicare and Social Security
financing, population aging combined with rising
premiums could place more pressure on an already
strained employment-based health insurance system.”