Adverse Selection and Generosity of Alcohol Treatment Benefits
Open Access
- 1 November 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in INQUIRY: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing
- Vol. 39 (4) , 413-428
- https://doi.org/10.5034/inquiryjrnl_39.4.413
Abstract
Concerns about attracting disproportionate numbers of employees with alcohol problems limit employers' willingness to offer health plans with generous alcohol treatment benefits. This paper analyzes two potential avenues of adverse selection, namely biased enrollment into plans and biased exit from plans offered by 57 employers between 1991 and 1997. We compare alcohol treatment use rates and costs of new and old enrollees between more generous and less generous plans; we also analyze disenrollment rates and enrollment duration by plan generosity for users and nonusers of alcohol treatment services. To avoid confounding benefit generosity with other plan features, in particular the use of managed care mechanisms, we compare plans that were administered in the same way by a large managed behavioral health care organization. Overall, we find no evidence of adverse selection into more generous plans. Contrary to the selection hypothesis, treatment costs of new members compared to old members are lower in firms with more generous treatment benefits than in firms with more limited benefits. Also, users of alcohol treatment services do not remain disproportionately enrolled longer in plans with generous benefits.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Effect of Copayments on Drug and Alcohol Treatment Following Inpatient Detoxification Under Managed CarePsychiatric Services, 2000
- Cost and quality trends under managed care: is there a learning curve in behavioral health carve-out plans?Journal of Health Economics, 1999
- Paying for Health Insurance: The Trade-Off between Competition and Adverse SelectionThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1998
- Costs And Incentives In A Behavioral Health Carve-OutHealth Affairs, 1998
- The Medicare-HMO Revolving Door — The Healthy Go in and the Sick Go OutNew England Journal of Medicine, 1997
- On the Validity of Using Census Geocode Characteristics to Proxy Individual Socioeconomic CharacteristicsJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1996
- Risk Contracts in Managed Mental Health CareHealth Affairs, 1995
- The FEHBP as a Model for a New Medicare ProgramHealth Affairs, 1995
- Health Plan Switching in Anticipation of Increased Medical Care UtilizationMedical Care, 1993
- Are HMO Enrollees Being Attracted by a Liberal Maternity Benefit?Medical Care, 1980