Retiree Health Benefits Examined: Findings from the Kaiser/Hewitt 2006 Survey on Retiree Health Benefits

Published: Nov 30, 2006

This includes the full report on the 2006 Kaiser/Hewitt survey of large businesses that provide retiree health benefits to their workers. The Kaiser/Hewitt study, the fifth joint survey since 2002, analyzes responses from a non-probability sample of 302 businesses with 1,000 or more employees that offer retiree health benefits. These large firms collectively provide health benefits for 5.2 million retirees and dependents, including 3.4 million Medicare-eligible retirees. Together they account for more than one quarter of the 12 million Medicare beneficiaries with retiree health benefits nationally and nearly half of the 7.2 million beneficiaries with private-sector retiree health coverage. The survey was conducted online between June and October 2006.

Report (.pdf)

Chartpack: Findings from the Kaiser/Hewitt 2006 Survey on Retiree

Published: Nov 30, 2006

Health Benefits

This document presents key data from the 2006 Kaiser/Hewitt Survey on Retiree Health Benefits.

Chartpack (.pdf)

Voices of Beneficiaries: Medicare Part D Insights and Observations One Year Later

Published: Nov 30, 2006

This report describes the views and experiences of 35 Medicare beneficiaries under the new drug benefit in advance of the 2007 open enrollment period. The report finds that drug plan enrollees generally say that they are satisfied with their drug coverage and have not encountered major difficulties using their plan. At the same time, many of them don’t fully understand how their plan works even after almost a year of experience with this new benefit.

The report is the third from a year-long series of one-on-one structured interviews with a diverse group of Medicare beneficiaries in four cities: Baltimore, Miami, Sacramento, and Lincoln, Nebraska. The Kaiser Family Foundation commissioned Lake Research Partners and American Viewpoint to conduct these interviews.

The first report, “Profiles of Medicare Beneficiaries With Medicaid Drug Coverage Prior to the Medicare Drug Benefit,” profiled four people who are dually eligible for Medicare and Medicaid to provide greater insights into their circumstances as the new Medicare drug benefit went into effect. The second report, “Voices of Beneficiaries: Early Experiences with the Medicare Drug Benefit,” addressed the first months of Part D coverage in 2006.

Report (.pdf)

2006 Kaiser/Hewitt Retiree Health Benefits Survey

Published: Nov 30, 2006

The 2006 Kaiser/Hewitt survey of large businesses that provide retiree health benefits to their workers assesses their evolving responses to the new Medicare drug benefit in 2006. It also looks at the rising costs and changing benefits of retiree health coverage overall in 2006, as well as the outlook for 2007 and beyond.

The Kaiser/Hewitt study, the fifth joint survey since 2002, analyzes responses from a non-probability sample of 302 businesses with 1,000 or more employees that offer retiree health benefits. These large firms collectively provide health benefits for 5.2 million retirees and dependents, including 3.4 million Medicare-eligible retirees. Together they account for more than one quarter of the 12 million Medicare beneficiaries with retiree health benefits nationally and nearly half of the 7.2 million beneficiaries with private-sector retiree health coverage. The survey was conducted online between June and October 2006.

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News Release

Report

Chartpack

Earlier Reports:

2005 Survey on Retiree Health Benefits2004 Survey on Retiree Health Benefits

Retiree Health Benefits in 2003: Employer Survey

2002 Retiree Health Survey

Poll Finding

Seniors and the Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit

Published: Nov 30, 2006

The survey, which assessed seniors’ views of and experiences with the Medicare drug benefit, was conducted November 9-19 by the Kaiser Family Foundation and the Harvard School of Public Health. It included a nationally representative sample of 718 seniors, including 275 who reported being enrolled in a Medicare drug plan.

The questions about experiences under the Medicare drug benefit were part of a larger survey of 1,867 adults on the public’s health agenda for Congress and the presidential campaign. The survey’s margin of sampling error is plus or minus 4 percentage points for all seniors, and plus or minus 7 percentage points for seniors enrolled in the Medicare drug benefit.

Chartpack

Toplines

Profiles of Medicaid’s High Cost Populations

Published: Nov 30, 2006

This paper examines the role that Medicaid plays in addressing six populations (preterm birth babies, foster care children, individuals with spinal cord and traumatic brain injuries, individuals with mental illness, individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities, and people with Alzheimer’s disease) with serious health needs resulting in high costs. For each population profiled, the report describes the condition and the need for services and supports, as well as the role of Medicaid in meeting those needs. Profiles of real people with these conditions are also included with descriptions of model programs or cutting edge practices designed to meet the needs of these individuals.

Executive Summary (.pdf)

Full Report (.pdf)

Poll Finding

Toplines: The Public’s Health Care Agenda

Published: Nov 30, 2006

These toplines provide the complete survey questions and findings from The Public’s Health Care Agenda for the New Congress and Presidential Campaign, conducted jointly by the Kaiser Family Foundation and the Harvard School of Public Health between November 9 and 19, 2006. The survey looks at the public’s priorities and views on health issues as a new Democratic majority takes the leadership of Congress and as the 2008 presidential campaign begins to take shape. It also includes a sample of 718 seniors, including 275 who reported being enrolled in the Medicare drug benefit, who were asked about their experiences with Medicare Part D as the open enrollment period comes to an end on December 31, 2006.

Toplines (.pdf)

Medicaid 1915(c) Home and Community-Based Service Programs: Annual Data Update

Published: Nov 30, 2006

Developing home and community-based service (HCBS) alternatives to institutional care has been a priority for many state Medicaid programs over the last two decades and the focus of Medicaid policy debates recently. While the majority of Medicaid long-term care dollars go toward institutional care, the national percentage of Medicaid spending on HCBS has more than doubled from 1992 to 2003. This report presents a summary of the main trends to emerge from the data for the three Medicaid HCBS programs, and findings from the survey of policies used on 1915(c) waivers in 2005.

Issue Brief (.pdf)

Poll Finding

Chartpack: The Public’s Health Care Agenda

Published: Nov 29, 2006

These charts highlight data from The Public’s Health Care Agenda for the New Congress and Presidential Campaign, conducted jointly by the Kaiser Family Foundation and the Harvard School of Public Health between November 9 and 19, 2006. The survey looks at the public’s priorities and views on health issues as a new Democratic majority takes the leadership of Congress and as the 2008 presidential campaign begins to take shape.

Chartpack (.pdf)

Poll Finding

The Public’s Health Care Agenda for the New Congress and Presidential Campaign, December 2006

Published: Nov 29, 2006

This Kaiser Family Foundation/Harvard School of Public Health National Survey looks at the public’s priorities and views on health issues as a new Democratic majority takes the leadership of Congress and as the 2008 presidential campaign begins to take shape. It focuses, in particular, on differences and similarities among Democrats, Republicans, and those who identify themselves as Independents or something else.

The poll, conducted November 9-19, 2006, by the Kaiser Family Foundation and the Harvard School of Public Health, included a nationally representative sample of 1,867 adults, and was designed and analyzed by researchers at the Kaiser Family Foundation and Harvard School of Public Health.