Aetna, the health insurance arm of CVS Health Corp., has
launched what it calls the first national health plan built around virtual
primary care. The benefit design, which is a further expansion of CVS's
longstanding relationship with virtual care provider Teladoc Inc., will be
available to self-funded plans.
According to a CVS press release, the new plan is designed with an emphasis
on continuity of care and convenience, starting with "a continuous
relationship with a virtual care physician beginning from the first 30-45
minute comprehensive primary care visit and extending to every visit
thereafter," and it promises "timely primary care appointments."
Virtual primary care is a starting point:
- "Virtual-first is a plan design [that's] not hard
to figure out when you have doctors available," says Steve
Blumenfield, head of strategy and innovation for health benefits at Willis
Towers Watson.
- "The question now is, this kind of digital
platform — is it going to be a cornerstone of all the health plan
offerings?" asks Ashraf Shehata, KPMG's national sector lead for
health care and life sciences. "Virtual primary care lends itself to
being the sweet spot of the virtual platform." Shehata expects that
could be a "common starting point" for health plan benefit
design going forward.
The key to success:
- For both Aetna and the broader payer industry, "telehealth
will be an important part of the health benefit going forward with a mix
of those outsourcing and insourcing the capabilities," Citi analyst
Ralph Giacobbe wrote in an Aug. 11 note to investors. "The ability to
offer telehealth in conjunction with onsite care, and particularly ability
to steer volume, will differentiate success around telehealth strategies,
in our opinion."
- The key to the success of the offering, Blumenfield
says, is whether it will reduce costs for plan sponsors — adding that most
plan sponsors have a virtual care benefit already.
- Blumenfield and Shehata also emphasize that plan
sponsors will have to strike a balance between continuity and steering
members to cut costs.
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