Well, who would have thought that my posts regarding Consumer Driven Healthcare would spark so many calls and e-mails.  Since a blog is an ongoing story that is forever being written, I don’t always get the chance to write every detail.  Over time, this will change as I add more and more content – I can only type so much in a day.

One of the e-mails I received asked if I believed that Consumer-driven healthcare could work without insurance.  The answer of course is no.  If you had the chance to read my article in Benefits Canada this month, I provided some options for Canadian companies to use the US-model of delivering CDH with the use of a Health and Welfare Trust (HWT).  In the article, I suggested that companies offer an Health Spending Account in the form of an HWT as a replacement to traditional insurance for predictable claims.  An HSA is an ideal funding model to cover predictable claims, the ones you know your employees will incur and therefore you have no need to insure for the event.  After all, nobody would ever consider buying gas insurance for their car so why would you pay a premium for your annual dental cleaning. 

However, I cannot stress enough the importance of insurance for the unpredictable.  That is, after all, why we buy insurance.  If anyone thought that I suggested we abandon insurance and go to a cash-savings model only, I apologize.  What I wanted to stress is that the decision making on how premiums are paid and what they are paid for should be part of the decision making process of the consumer.  Maybe not immediately, but certainly down the road once the support network is in place to educate and inform consumers to make sensible choices.  The key issue at hand is the ability for consumers to make choices and spend their money in a more sensible manner.  Buying insurance for the unpredictable claims and using their HSA for the predictable is money spent, in a sensible manner.

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