May 2005
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Benefit Services Group, Inc.
28423 Orchard Lake Road
Suite 200
Farmington Hills, MI 48334

Phone: (248) 553-9040
Fax:    (248) 553-9042

Info@BenefitServicesGroup.com
www.YourBenefitStore.com


Welcome to Our Newsletter!

Benefit Services Group specializes in quality employee….l benefit programs.  Our clients are an employer that cares about their employees.  We provide our clients a prescription on how to contain benefit cost while maintaining a good benefit program.

Welcome to Our Newsletter!  It is with great satisfaction, we bring you this newsletter. This month’s articles show there is some slowing and ideas for re-evaluating your health care spending.  The May issue  includes the  “Average retiree health costs rise to $190,000”, “More Employers Try Graded Healthcare Contributions”, “Study: 1 in 5 Teens Tried Painkillers”, “Growth in Health Care Spending Projected to Slow, But Still Exceed Inflation”, “Considering Changing Health Plans? Start by Evaluating Current Plan”, “Financial Education Boosts 401(k) Participation”, and “Disability As a Result of Diabetes Doubles” are articles you don’t want to miss.

Let us know if you want us to further investigate how some of these idea’s can improve your employee benefits and or there cost.  If you have a topic for future discussion, please let me know.  We value your opinion; any suggestions for improvement are always welcome.  Send them to us via email to jshort@benefitservicesgroup.com or fax (248-553-9042).


J. Patrick Short
President
 


Kenneth E. Tebbetts
Account Executive

New Website Features:

Average retiree health costs rise to $190,000

The average 65-year-old couple retiring today will need $190,000 to cover medical costs over the next 15 to 20 years, Fidelity Investments estimates. That figure is up 8.6% from the $175,000 in savings projected last year.

The estimate includes expenses associated with Medicare Part B and D premiums, Medicare cost-sharing provisions, and prescription drug costs. It assumes there is no employer-provided retiree health coverage and life expectancies of 80 years for men and 85 years for women. Fidelity doesn't account for other health expenses, such as over-the-counter medications, most dental services and long-term care.

Fidelity projects the average retired couple will pay $62,700 on drug costs, $58,900 on Medicare Part B & D premiums and $68,400 on all other health expenses.

The increase in retiree health costs comes at a time many companies are cutting their retiree health benefits. The percentage of private employers that offered retiree health benefits to Medicare-eligible retirees - those 65 and over - dropped to 13% from 20%, according to a recent survey by the Employee Benefit Research Institute.

More Employers Try Graded Healthcare Contributions (Employee Benefit News)

Aware of low-wage workers' struggle to pay for their share of medical coverage, and increasing number of employers are embracing an income-based sliding scale for employees' health care contributions. Twenty-one percent employers will differentiate employee health care contributions based on pay in 2005. Up from 18% last year, according to a recent Hewitt Associates survey of more than 500 employers.

Study: 1 in 5 Teens Tried Painkillers

NEW YORK - About one in five teenagers have tried prescription painkillers such as Vicodin and OxyContin to get high, with the pill-popping members of "Generation Rx" often raiding their parents' medicine cabinets, according to a study by the Partnership for a Drug-Free America.
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Growth in Health Care Spending Projected to Slow, But Still Exceed Inflation

Total health care spending is projected to reach 18.7 percent of the gross domestic product by the year 2014, up from the 15.3 percent it represented in 2003, according to health tracking trends published in Health Affairs.

“U.S. Health Spending Projections For 2004-2014” projects private heath care spending will grow at a rate of 6.6 percent in 2005 and at an average rate of 6.4 percent from 2003-2014, growth that continues to outpace inflation, but which represents some relief for employers and other private sector payers, compared with the double-digit increases seen in some recent few years.  In contrast, growth in public spending for health care is expected to be higher—the report projects 8.1 percent growth for 2005, and average growth of 7.4 percent from 2003-2014.  As a result of this difference between the rates of growth in the private and public sectors, public funding of health care will exceed a record 49 percent of total U.S. health care spending by the end of the projection period.
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Considering Changing Health Plans? Start by Evaluating Current Plan

Though medical cost increases have slowed somewhat according to recent surveys, any rate of increase is enough to cause an employer to question whether it’s getting its money’s worth out of its current health plan. This worry, along with the desire to secure quality coverage for employees, can prompt an employer to consider shopping around for a new health plan, or new health plan carrier.
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Financial Education Boosts 401(k) Participation

Since the stock market declines earlier this decade, 401(k) plan participation rates have declined, or remained flat. According to PlanSponsor, an online and print resource on pension and retirement issues, participation rates averaged 74.3% in 2004, up from 2003 but not back to 2002 levels. Figures from the Profit Sharing/401(k) Council (PSCA) report an average 401(k) plan participation rate of 76.4%.
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Disability As a Result of Diabetes Doubles

The incidence of diabetes is rising, along with the costs of the disease, both to those who have the disease and to the businesses that employ them.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that more than 18 million Americans have diabetes.  The vast majority of diabetes cases—90% to 95%—are Type 2 diabetes, a condition commonly associated with obesity (among other factors) and one that typically surfaces as an individual ages (although recently the incidence of Type 2 diabetes has risen in children and young adults).
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The purpose of this newsletter is to provide information about industry trends and news of general interest to our clients, potential clients and other professionals. Information about product offerings, services, or benefits is illustrative and general in description, and is not intended to be relied on as complete information. While every attempt is made to ensure the accuracy of the information provided, we do not warranty the accuracy of the information.

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