Spending by Canadians on private health insurance
has more than doubled over the past 20 years, but insurers paid out a
rapidly decreasing proportion as benefits, according to a study
published in the CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal).
The study, by University of British Columbia and University of Toronto
researchers, shows that overall Canadians paid $6.8 billion more in
premiums than they received in benefits in 2011.
Approximately 60 per cent of Canadians have private health insurance.
Typically obtained as a benefit of employment or purchased by
individuals, private health insurance usually covers prescription drugs,
dental services and eye care costs not paid by public health care.
Over the past two decades, the gap between what insurers take in and
what they pay out has increased threefold. While private insurers paid
out 92 per cent of group plan insurance premiums as benefits in 1991,
they paid only 74 per cent in 2011. Canadians who purchased individual
plans fared even worse, with just 38 per cent of their premiums returned
as benefits in 2011.
"Small businesses and individual entrepreneurs are the hardest hit -
they end up paying far more for private health coverage," says study
lead author Michael Law, an assistant professor in UBC's Centre for
Health Services and Policy Research, "It's essentially an extra health
tax on one of our main economic drivers.
"Our findings suggest that private insurers are likely making greater
profits, paying higher wages to their executives and employees, or
spending more on marketing," Law adds.
The authors call for greater transparency from private insurers and for the federal government to introduce new regulations. "Obamacare
requires insurers to pay out 80 to 85 per cent of their premium income
as benefits, which resulted in $1.1 billion being returned to
policyholders in 2012," says Law. "Our numbers suggest that Canadians
are getting a worse deal than Americans."
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