Self-selection into health insurance plans is well documented. Individuals with poorer health and higher expenditures are more likely to select more generous health insurance plans (
1–
4). If too many individuals with poor health choose a particular plan, the plan’s costs quickly escalate beyond the amount collected from monthly premiums, potentially leading to the plan’s collapse, the well-known “death spiral.”
Although many studies have examined adverse selection by using self-reported overall health or medical diagnoses (
5–
11), few have examined the role of behavioral health diagnoses (
12). This gap in the literature is significant; individuals with a history of behavioral health conditions tend to incur higher medical expenditures than others (
11,
13), and the prevalence of behavioral health disorders is high. Nearly one in five U.S. adults live with a mental health illness (
12).
Examining the role that behavioral health diagnoses play in adverse selection is important for several reasons. First, given the continuing rise in high-deductible plans, consumers may be increasingly exposed to high deductibles (
14), which could further increase adverse selection. Out-of-pocket spending has grown 58% in employer-sponsored health insurance since 2007, more than double the increase in worker’s wages. Deductibles now account for more than half of enrollee cost-sharing payments (
14). Enrollees planning for behavioral health–related expenditures may select plans with lower deductibles. Second, to avoid adverse selection, plans may distort the quality of services they provide (
15), restrict provider networks (
16,
17), assess higher copays for drugs for specific conditions (
18), or create formularies favoring certain conditions. Plans may be using these approaches to avoid adverse selection among individuals with behavioral health conditions (
16,
19,
20). Thus, ensuring that plans with benefits for individuals with behavioral health diagnoses are adequately compensated is critical to safeguarding the accessibility of mental health treatment.
Most studies examining the association between behavioral health and adverse selection have considered prior use of behavioral health services or self-reported mental health, finding mixed evidence for adverse selection (
19). Prior use of psychiatric services and the number of chronic conditions in the family were found to be associated with lower likelihood of selecting into less generous plans (
5,
21). A study using self-rated behavioral health (22) found that perceived mental health risk, but not perceived poor general health, affected health insurance choices for some groups. The limitations of these studies included that they aggregated all use of behavioral health services into one or two variables and examined only one or two employers at a time, which limited generalizability.
There is also scant evidence on how policy holders make decisions for dependents with behavioral health diagnoses. In one of the few studies examining this topic, Padgett et al. (
23) used insurance claims and enrollment data from federal employees and family members in the Federal Employee Program and found that children of families enrolled in the more generous plan were 2–3 times more likely than children enrolled in the less generous plan to use outpatient mental health services; these children also had more mental health care visits, suggesting potential adverse selection by families, although this conclusion could be muddied by the effect of moral hazard.
In this study, we assessed the role of behavioral health in self-selection behavior by examining the association between having behavioral health diagnoses and being enrolled in the lowest-deductible plan among a population of employees and dependents enrolled in commercial “carve-in” plans, in which behavioral health and medical benefits are administered by the same plan. We hypothesized that having behavioral health conditions would be associated with being enrolled in plans with a lower deductible because subscribers and families may have higher expected future costs of care. We also hypothesized that those with severe or chronic behavioral health conditions would be more likely to be enrolled in plans with lower deductibles than those with less severe or more time-limited conditions. Our study complements the existing literature by examining a comprehensive set of specific behavioral health diagnoses; by using administrative data, which are thought to be more reliable than self-report; by separately considering both individual and family subscribers; and by examining selection by different family types.
Thus, our research question for this retrospective study, which used secondary data analysis, was as follows: among individual subscribers and families with employer-sponsored health insurance choices, are behavioral health diagnoses associated with being enrolled in health insurance plans with the lowest deductibles?
Methods
Sources of Data
Many studies of self-selection in the employer-sponsored health insurance market are limited by analyzing plan choice among only one employer. We were able to examine selection behavior across a wide spectrum of employers in multiple industries across states using data sets provided by the behavioral health division of Optum, a fully owned subsidiary of UnitedHealth Group. Optum is one of the largest national managed behavioral health organizations, and its members are distributed across all U.S. states. Employer-sponsored health insurance accounts for half of all health insurance coverage in the United States (
24); thus, examining drivers of selection behavior in this market can have important financial implications.
To construct our analysis data set, we linked five databases provided by Optum or its sister company, UnitedHealthcare: specialty behavioral health claims providing detailed information on diagnoses; eligibility files, which include age, gender, the individual’s relationship to the insurance subscriber, state of residence, and plan enrollment information; employer and plan characteristics from Optum’s book of business; detailed benefit design data; and sociodemographic data from a commercial marketing database for a subset of enrollees (used for sensitivity analyses). Notably, our data contained individual identifiers that, although scrambled so individuals were de-identified, were constructed to allow us to link members together into family units. The benefit design data contained information at the level of insurance plan year on benefit design features, including deductibles, out-of-pocket maximums, copayments, coinsurance by type of service, excluded diagnoses, and treatment limitations, in addition to employer ID and year. The source of this information was Optum’s claims processing engine, which therefore represented the true values for these benefit design features.
We pooled two sets of observations, each based on 13 months of data: those with 2011 claims data and information on 2012 plan choice from January 2012 and those with 2012 claims data and information on 2013 plan choice from January 2013. This study was deemed exempt by the University of California, Los Angeles, Institutional Review Board.
Sample
Data were analyzed separately for single subscribers with individual coverage (N=116,975) and three family types: a couple (i.e., an adult subscriber with a spouse or domestic partner) with at least one dependent (N=59,237), an adult subscriber with one or more dependents (N=19,066), and a couple with no dependents (N=40,917). (For a summary of the initial sample sizes and the number of observations dropped after imposing study inclusion and exclusion criteria, see the online supplement.) We included only individuals or families who were offered two or more plan choices.
Measures
We used benefit design data to create a dichotomous variable for whether the selected plan had the lowest deductible among all the plans that were provided by the employer. We used ICD-9 codes from the specialty behavioral health claims to assign prior-year behavioral health diagnoses for individuals and families. These diagnoses included adjustment disorders, posttraumatic stress disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, panic disorder, phobias, cognitive disorders (e.g., dementia), attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, other childhood disorders, development disorders (e.g., pervasive development disorders), bipolar disorder, depression, personality disorders, psychotic disorders (e.g., schizophrenia), alcohol use disorders, drug use disorders, and a category for other psychiatric disorders. We did not examine childhood behavioral health diagnoses among individual subscribers, given that all individuals were ages 18–64 while in the study cohort.
We controlled for the subscriber’s age group, sex, year of plan selection, and state of residence in January of the plan selection year. Where relevant in the family models, we also controlled for couple type (i.e., same-gender or different-gender domestic partnership or same-gender or different-gender married couple) and number of dependents younger than age 6, ages 6–11, ages 12–17, ages 18–26, and ages 27 or older. In sensitivity analyses, we instead controlled for whether the families had any dependents in these age categories. Using the subsample of observations with sociodemographic data (available for half of the sample), we also ran sensitivity analyses, adding covariates for the subscriber’s race-ethnicity and language, household income and net worth, and education level.
Analysis
For the individual subscribers, we estimated three regression models, examining whether the subscriber had any psychiatric diagnosis, the number of psychiatric diagnoses the subscriber had, and whether the subscriber had a psychiatric diagnosis in each major diagnosis category. For the family units, following Deb et al. (
22) and Strombom et al. (
25), we examined whether anybody in the family had any psychiatric diagnosis, the total number of psychiatric diagnoses in the family, and whether anybody in the family had a psychiatric diagnosis in each major diagnosis category.
We estimated all models by using logistic regression with robust “sandwich” standard errors with generalized estimating equations to account for employer-level sampling (
26,
27). To facilitate interpretation of the magnitude of the estimates, we report marginal effects (the average percentage point changes in the probability of the outcome associated with a one-unit change in the predictor from zero to one, holding all of the other covariates constant at their original values). Because marginal effects are nonlinear functions of the regression estimates, standard errors were calculated with a first-order Taylor series expansion (
28).
Results
Characteristics of the Study Samples
Table 1 and
Table 2 include sociodemographic characteristics and behavioral health claims diagnoses for individual subscribers and family units. The most common diagnoses were depression, adjustment disorders, and generalized anxiety disorder; attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder was also a prevalent diagnosis for family units with dependents.
Association Between Behavioral Health Diagnoses and Selection of the Lowest-Deductible Plan
Table 3 shows the marginal effects of behavioral health diagnoses on being enrolled in the lowest-deductible plan among those offered by the employer group. Among individual subscribers, having any psychiatric diagnosis was associated with a four-percentage-point higher probability of being enrolled in the plan with the lowest deductible compared with having no diagnosis, ceteris paribus (marginal effect=0.04; 95% confidence interval [CI]=0.00, 0.08; p=0.04). The effect appears to be additive: on average, for individual enrollees, the regression-adjusted probability of being enrolled in the behavioral health plan with the lowest deductible increased by approximately three percentage points with each additional psychiatric diagnosis (marginal effect=0.03; 95% CI=0.00–0.05; p=0.01). The probability of being enrolled in the plan with the lowest deductible was four percentage points higher for individuals with a prior-year diagnosis of major depression compared with those without such a diagnosis, ceteris paribus (marginal effect=0.04; 95% CI=0.01–0.08; p=0.02). However, other behavioral health diagnoses did not have a significant effect on being enrolled in the plan with the lowest deductible.
Among single parents (subscriber with at least one child), having any behavioral health diagnosis in the family was significantly associated with being enrolled in the lowest-deductible plan (marginal effect=0.05; 95% CI=0.02–0.08; p≤0.001). The probability of being enrolled in the behavioral health plan with the lowest deductible increased by approximately two percentage points with every additional diagnosis in the family (marginal effect=0.02; 95% CI=0.00–0.03; p=0.01). Being enrolled in the plan with the lowest deductible was significantly associated with adjustment disorders (marginal effect=0.06; 95% CI=0.02–0.10; p=0.001) and generalized anxiety disorder (marginal effect=0.06; 95% CI=0.01–0.10; p=0.02).
Among couples with at least one dependent (families with one adult subscriber, one spouse or domestic partner, and at least one child), we did not find any significant associations between being enrolled in the lowest-deductible plan and having any psychiatric diagnosis, the number of psychiatric diagnoses within the family, or the presence of indicators for the major diagnosis categories within the family. Among couples with no dependents, having a family member with an adjustment disorder diagnosis was associated with a five-point higher probability of being enrolled in the behavioral health plan with the lowest deductible (marginal effect=0.05; 95% CI=0.01–0.09; p=0.02).
Sensitivity Analyses
We had sociodemographic data for approximately half of the sample. To test the robustness of our findings, we reran the models controlling for race-ethnicity and language, income and net worth, and education. The models controlling for sociodemographic variables showed more significant results, suggesting our original findings may be conservative. However, when comparing results from the parsimonious regressions run using the subsamples with and without sociodemographic data, we found that the stronger results in the full models were due to limiting the sample to individuals with sociodemographic data, not to controlling for the sociodemographic variables per se.
Discussion
In our cross-sectional analyses of U.S. employer-sponsored plans, we found that among individuals and families, there was an association between being enrolled in plans with lower deductibles and behavioral health diagnoses. For individual subscribers, this was true among individuals with conditions that may be chronic or recurrent, such as depression. As the number of diagnoses increased, the likelihood of being enrolled in the plan with the lowest deductible increased because individuals may have planned for future expenditures. Among single parents with at least one dependent and couples with no dependents, adjustment disorders and generalized anxiety disorder were associated with being enrolled in the plan with the lower deductible.
Our findings are in line with other studies that examine self-selection among individuals with behavioral health conditions by considering prior use of health services or self-reported mental health conditions (
21,
22,
29,
30). Our findings provide further evidence of an association between having a chronic mental health condition, such as depression, and being enrolled in a plan with a lower deductible. We also found an association between behavioral health diagnoses in a family and being enrolled in a plan with a lower deductible. Therefore, we hypothesized that families may plan for the use of mental health services after major life stressors, although we were not able to confirm this hypothesis with our study. Although adjustment disorders are temporary, their higher prevalence may reflect a shift in diagnosis to a more severe or chronic condition without a corresponding change in administrative coding. Single parents and couples without children were both more likely to be enrolled in the plan with the lowest deductible when anyone in the family had an adjustment disorder. Adjustment disorders were among the most prevalent disorders in our sample: among individual subscribers, 1.7% of our sample had a diagnosis of adjustment disorder in the year before plan selection and among the family groups, the prevalence ranged from 2.4% to 6.0%.
Our findings had several limitations. We did not have access to medical claims, so were not able to control for medical diagnoses in our regressions. Behavioral health and medical conditions are often comorbid (more than 68% of adults with a mental disorder have medical conditions, and 29% of adults with medical conditions have a mental disorder) (
31), so our models may not capture decision making for individuals basing their decisions primarily on medical diagnoses, potentially leading to overstatement of our effects. Additionally, clinicians have increasingly been providing behavioral health care in primary care. As a result, we may not have captured all behavioral health diagnoses if individuals received care outside of the behavioral health care setting.
Self-selection could be driven by differences in other benefit design features, including copays, coinsurance, or premiums. Notably, however, we found little variation in other aspects of benefit design across commercial plans offered within the same employer groups, so other cost-sharing features were effectively held constant. To address concerns about unmeasured differences in plan premiums, we constructed a proxy for relative premiums by using actual claims experience. Controlling for this measure yielded similar results among individual subscribers but much stronger and highly significant associations in the expected direction among families. Although relative premiums are prone to reverse causality, these findings suggest that if anything, our estimates are conservative.
We also did not have data about the amount of time individuals or families had been on plans prior to our study year, so we were not able to control for potential inertia around plan selection. For some family types, the samples for certain diagnoses were small, limiting our ability to draw conclusions about the association between some behavioral health disorders and plan selection. Given our data source, we were not able to assess severity of the condition, limiting our ability to draw conclusions between severity of the diagnoses and plan selection. Finally, we were not able to assess the network available to subscribers, which could influence plan selection.
Our study had important strengths. We add to the literature by modeling how different behavioral health diagnoses are associated with plan choice. Our unique data set includes the plan choice set for each subscriber, deductibles for each plan, and actual plan selections. Our study is one of few that models insurance choices for different family types, because studies rarely have data to link enrollees within subscriber units. Our data set also includes information on enrollee relationships, so we could study several family types.
Conclusions
Our findings demonstrate that behavioral health diagnoses may play an important role in how individuals make decisions about health insurance. The magnitudes of these associations were fairly substantial: for individual enrollees, having any psychiatric diagnosis was associated with an increase of about 10% in the probability of being enrolled in the lowest-deductible plan compared with having no psychiatric diagnosis (44.9% vs. 40.7%). For single parents, having any psychiatric diagnosis in the family was associated with an increase in probability from 37.1% to 42.1%.
Our findings have policy implications for the employer-sponsored insurance markets. If payers perfectly understood the risk of coverage for the individuals purchasing the coverage, they would set commensurate premiums. However, when individuals systematically select insurance because of unobserved factors (e.g., knowledge of future health expenditures), certain plans might be exposed to more risk, whereas others retain healthier populations. Understanding which diagnoses are associated with being enrolled in particular plans has important implications for risk adjustment and the financial viability of health plans offering more generous benefits for individuals with chronic conditions. Employers and other purchasers wishing to compensate more generous plans for adverse selection should adjust capitation payments for behavioral health conditions. Some cross-subsidization across plans may be necessary to avoid the death spiral that could result if increased premiums were fully passed along to the consumers.
Acknowledgments
The authors thank Brent Bolstrom and Nghi Ly from Optum, UnitedHealth Group, for the extraction, preparation, and delivery of data to UCLA. These views represent the opinions of the authors and not necessarily those of the National Institutes of Health; Optum, UnitedHealth Group; or UCLA. The data used in this study are proprietary and (as per the terms of the data use agreement between UCLA and Optum, UnitedHealth Group) cannot be shared. The academic team members analyzed all data independently and retained sole authority over all publication-related decisions throughout the course of the study.