Managing health care costs: strategies available to small businesses

Health Care Superv. 1990 Jul;8(4):65-70.

Abstract

Although health care costs continue to rise at an alarming rate, small businesses can take steps to help moderate these costs. First, business firms must restructure benefits so that needless surgery is eliminated and inpatient hospital care is minimized. Next, small firms should investigate the feasibility of partial self-insurance options such as risk pooling and purchasing preferred premium plans. Finally, small firms should investigate the cost savings that can be realized through the use of alternative health care delivery systems such as HMOs and PPOs. Today, competition is reshaping the health care industry by creating more options and rewarding efficiency. The prospect of steadily rising prices and more choices makes it essential that small employers become prudent purchasers of employee health benefits. For American businesses, the issue is crucial. Unless firms can control health care costs, they will have to keep boosting the prices of their goods and services and thus become less competitive in the global marketplace. In that event, many workers will face a prospect even more grim than rising medical premiums: losing their jobs.

MeSH terms

  • Commerce*
  • Cost Control / methods*
  • Health Benefit Plans, Employee / organization & administration*
  • Insurance Claim Review
  • Insurance, Health / organization & administration*
  • Managed Care Programs
  • United States