Archive for September, 2011

Employers Increasingly Trimming Or Cutting Disability Benefits

Washington, DC, United States (KaiserHealth) – Disability insurance is one of those under-the-radar benefits you may take for granted, especially if your employer picks up the tab for the coverage, as many firms do. Because of that, as annual benefit enrollment time approaches you probably aren’t worried about examining your disability coverage details and costs the way you will your health insurance plan options. But you should.

The same pattern that has emerged in health insurance — employers’ shifting more costs onto workers’ shoulders and trimming or eliminating benefits — is occurring in disability coverage. This fall, as employers spell out insurance options for next year, evaluate what’s offered and what it will cost, and make sure you’re adequately covered.

Of course, one of the main reasons people give disability insurance short shrift is that they don’t think they’ll ever need it. Meanwhile, they routinely buy coverage to protect their lives and their homes, even though “for most people, the risk of long-term disability is far greater than of [early] death or their house burning down,” says Rich Fuerstenberg, a partner with human resources consultant Mercer.

According to the Social Security Administration, a 20-year-old has about a 30 percent chance of becoming disabled by the time he retires. Although many people assume that accidents are the most common reason for a disability insurance claim, illness accounts for 90 percent of all claims, says Barry Lundquist, president of the Council for Disability Awareness, a nonprofit education group funded by the disability insurance industry. The top reasons for new claims last year, according to the organization’s annual claim study, were musculoskeletal conditions such as arthritis or back problems, followed by cancer. A typical disability insurance claim lasts about 2.5 years, according to research compiled by CDA.

When Monica Soltes took a buyout from Merrill Lynch and decided to start her own financial planning business 10 years ago, she made sure she had health insurance but never considered buying disability insurance. “You’re 38 years old and you think, ‘What’s going to happen to me?’ I didn’t even think about it,” she recalls. Soltes moved from the Detroit area to sunny Del Mar, Calif., and rented an office with a view of the ocean.

Not long after the move, she slipped when she stepped off the porch at her cousin’s Santa Monica home and shattered her elbow. After multiple surgeries and an unsuccessful bone graft from her hip, she was no better off. Inadequate supply of blood to her upper arm and hip caused those bones to, effectively, die. Soltes also received a diagnosis of Cushing’s disease, a hormonal condition in which the body produces massive amounts of the hormone cortisol, which can cause bone loss.

Unable to work because of Cushing’s and other medical problems, Soltes moved back to Michigan, where she lives with an uncle. She receives Social Security disability benefits and is insured through the Medicare program. She hopes to start another business soon, perhaps helping disabled people get back to work.

A long-term-disability insurance plan could have helped Soltes maintain some of her income following her accident and subsequent medical problems.

If she was unable to perform her job, both individual and group plans would typically pay an amount replacing roughly 60 percent of her salary. In a group plan, payouts would be reduced by the amount she received in Social Security disability payments; individual policies would not deduct those payments.

There are other wrinkles in these policies: The group plan payout may be capped at $5,000 a month, for example, and after a few years many plans will continue to pay benefits only to claimants who are unable to perform any work that they’re suited for, not just the occupation they were trained for.

About a third of working Americans — about 50 million people — have disability insurance of some sort, says Lundquist. Since Soltes was self-employed, she would have to have purchased an individual policy. The majority of people with disability coverage, however, get it through their jobs.

But employer coverage no longer offers the protection it once did. For one thing, only 47 percent of employers offer long-term-disability coverage to their employees, according to Limra, a financial services trade association. (Companies with at least 100 employees are almost certain to offer some sort of disability benefit, say experts.)

Of employers that do offer disability coverage, just 37 percent paid the entire premium last year, down from 49 percent in 2002, according to Limra. At the same time, voluntary programs for which the employee pays the entire premium now make up half of all long-term-disability offerings, up from 41 percent in 2002.

When employees have to pay the entire premium, only about 40 percent generally sign up, says Lundquist. A typical employee-paid disability plan cost $350 a year in 2010, according to Limra. (Individual plans are more expensive but may also be more comprehensive, say experts. They typically cost between $600 and $2,000 annually, says Limra.)

In addition to being pricier than before, employer coverage is sometimes skimpier. The benefit may cover only 50 percent of an employee’s salary, rather than 60 percent. Some plans may offer employees the option to “buy up” to the 60 percent level, but that extra coverage may be costly because people who choose it are probably at higher risk of becoming disabled, says Richard McCabe, a director in the PricewaterhouseCoopers Human Resource Services health-care practice.

If your own company’s coverage is inadequate, consider supplementing it with an individual policy, say experts. No insurer will write a disability policy that replaces 100 percent of your salary: With that kind of coverage, no one would have an incentive to go back to work. But a combination of employer and supplemental individual coverage will generally replace 70 percent of someone’s income, says Lundquist. And that can buy you some peace of mind.

– Provided by Kaiser Health News.

Article © AHN – All Rights Reserved

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Using text messaging as weapon in malaria war

TA REACH, Cambodia (IRIN) – Cambodian efforts to contain the spread of malaria have been strengthened by a pilot project using text messaging and web-based technology.

“My work is definitely easier,” said Sophana Pich, 41, one of 184 village malaria workers (VMWs) now trained in three provinces (Kampot, Siem Reap and Kampong Cham) since the project launch earlier this year.

She typically diagnoses five to six cases of the often deadly virus each month during the rainy season between May and October.

“Before, it would take a month before this information was reported to the district health level. Now it’s instantaneous,” the mother-of-three said from her home in Ta Reach, a village of 200 households in Kampot Province, about 150km southwest of Phnom Penh.

There are close to 3,000 VMSs in 1,500 villages across Cambodia, described by many as the “foot soldiers” in the country’s fight against malaria.

As part of a larger US$22.5 million malaria containment effort launched by the government in 2009 and funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation , the volunteers receive three days of training in the early diagnosis of malaria and treatment.

In addition, they are given a bicycle, a pair of boots, a bag, a flashlight and a cooler box for medicines, as well as a small travel allowance.

Under the pilot scheme now under way, they are also given mobile phones.

Using FrontlineSMS – an open-source software enabling users to send and receive text messages with groups of people – VMSs can now report in real time all malaria cases in their villages to the Malaria Information and Alert System in Phnom Penh with a simple text message, including the patient’s name, age, location and type of virus.

That information is then disseminated to local, district and provincial health offices, with coordinates mapped on the country’s national malaria database using Google Earth.

Mobitel (Cambodia’s largest telecommunications company) provides free SIM cards and free SMSs, making the system cost-effective and easy to maintain.

“Without doubt, this is an important tool to quickly identify malaria cases and respond effectively,” explained Pengby Ngor, data manager for the Malaria Consortium , an NGO working closely with the government’s National Malaria Control Centre that helped develop the database.

“This is a pilot project which ultimately could be used throughout the country.”

That is good news for Cambodia, where malaria remains endemic; the government hopes to eliminate the disease over the next 15 years.

“We need a series of campaigns and activities so that malaria will go down towards the zero rate of malaria transmission by the year 2025,” Prime Minister Hun Sen told participants at this year’s 32nd National Health Conference in March.

Challenges

But while there is progress in that direction, including falling numbers of people getting sick or dying from malaria across much of the country, key challenges remain.

According to the Ministry of Health , the number of deaths from malaria fell by 53.8 percent in 2010 from the previous year.

At the same time, however, Cambodia has reported an increased incidence of multi-drug resistant falciparum malaria, one of four types of the disease, along parts of its 800km border with Thailand since 2009.

There health officials have expressed concern that the malaria causing parasite is becoming increasingly resistant to the most effective drug they have for treating it, Artemisinin.

“Here in Cambodia, we’ve found that the drug is less effective,” Najibullah Habib, malaria containment project manager for World Health Organization (WHO), confirmed in Phnom Penh, specifically in the area described as Zone 1.

In Cambodia, some 270,000 people live in Zone 1, comprised of Pailin Province, as well as parts of Battambang, Pursat and Kampot provinces.

Another 110,000 people live in the Thai border areas of Trat and Chanthaburi provinces.

“This is the epicentre of drug-resistant malaria,” Habib explained.

To counter that, Cambodian and international efforts are working on the ground to prevent the drug-resistant parasite from spreading elsewhere in the region, focusing on prevention, treatment and testing efforts at the village level.

“The VMWs are all over Zone 1,” the WHO official said. “They’re an essential tool.”

In 2008, prior to the distribution of more than half a million bed nets, as well as the VMW intervention, Zone 1 averaged more than 100 cases per month. Today that number is between 10 and 15.

According to WHO, in 2000, the number of treated malaria cases in Cambodia stood at 129,167 with 608 deaths. In 2010, that dropped to 56,217 and 135 deaths, down 78 percent.

About 3.3 billion people – half the world’s population – are at risk of malaria. Every year, this leads to about 250 million malaria cases and nearly one million deaths. People living in the poorest countries are the most vulnerable, the world health body says.

ds/mw

– Provided by Integrated Regional Information Networks.

Article © AHN – All Rights Reserved

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