Employers Grapple With Rising Health Care Costs And Fiduciary Concerns

Being an employer in 2025 is not for the faint of heart. Striking the right balance in providing competitive benefits that support and engage the workforce while navigating an environment of growing fiduciary risk and cost containment pressures is a major challenge.

“Most employers are at an intersection of a rapidly evolving economic, legislative and political landscape, and health care is a key component of this,” said Doug Hammond, CEO of the benefits consultant NFP. “As employers strive to ensure their employees have access to quality health care, they also appreciate the importance of minimizing the costs passed on to their workforce. This requires employers to be proactive and innovative in their approach.”

Even as health care costs continue to rise, employers remain committed to their benefits programs, with only 4% decreasing their health care spend this year and 43% increasing it, the 2025 NFP U.S. Benefits Trend Report found. Among other key trends.

  • Various pieces of health care transparency legislation have identified areas requiring employers to meet their fiduciary responsibilities, such as designing an evaluation process for selecting vendors to deploy their health and welfare benefits strategy.
  • Recent high-profile litigation has heightened awareness of fiduciary obligations in pharmacy benefit management. Employers now are seeking more sophisticated approaches to their PBMs, with 70% prioritizing the control of prescription drug spend. To help control pharmacy costs, employers are shifting toward independent benefit management, with 64% choosing either direct PBM carve outs or coalition participation.
  • As employers struggle to manage the complexities of leave requirements, more than 7 in 10 spend more than four hours on administration for each leave request. Tools such as technology-supported or outsourced leave management are growing in popularity to help employers remain compliant.
  • Many employers are expanding their mental health offerings, in part, through support for employees and their families across various life stages, from pediatric and dependent-children mental health services to increased offerings for the “sandwich generation” of caregivers.
  • Employers also are focused on physical and social wellbeing programs. The emergence of GLP-1 drugs has drastically shifted attention to comprehensive health and weight management initiatives. There is a particular emphasis on holistic wellness programs that emphasize sustainable lifestyle changes through nutrition, education and exercise. In addition, employers are looking to social wellbeing programs to strengthen workplace connections through approaches that support remote and in-office employees.

“To deliver solutions that meet employee needs, employers should allocate resources where they’ll have the greatest impact,” said Kim Bell, head of health and benefits for NFP. “A targeted approach focusing on comprehensive wellbeing can strengthen employee engagement, align organizational priorities and provide support across the entire workforce.”

 

Source Link

Recommended Articles

Hospitals, Clinics Want Nevada To Bolster Protections For Discount Drug Program

Nevada hospitals and health clinics say drug manufacturers are restricting the number of pharmacies in the state that can participate in a federal discount drug program. The limitations put in place by drug companies make it harder for patients to refill prescriptions at reduced rates, and they affect a revenue stream hospitals rely on to ...

Read More

Trump Administration Warns Over 500 Hospitals To Provide More Price Information Or Face Fines

The Trump administration has warned more than 500 hospitals that they are failing to provide the public with basic pricing information — arguing that the lack of disclosure is keeping healthcare costs higher than they should be. The Associated Press obtained exclusively the list of hospitals that since April have either received letters of warning or, in more severe ...

Read More

States Starting To See Major Obamacare Coverage Losses

Newly released state enrollment data show ObamaCare coverage losses could be even more severe than initially anticipated, due to Congress’s unwillingness to renew enhanced subsidies. Monthly enrollment data through April from Arkansas, Colorado, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Mexico and New York showed a significant number of people canceled their coverage or did not pay their premium bills after signing up for coverage in 2026, according to an analysis from Georgetown University. Federal officials have so far only released data ...

Read More

New NFIB Survey: Small Businesses Report Reduced Optimism

The NFIB Small Business Optimism Index fell 0.6 points in May to 95.3, remaining below its 52-year average of 98.0. The Uncertainty Index rose 3 points from April to 91, remaining well above its historical average of 68. As reported in NFIB’s monthly Jobs Report, the NFIB Small Business Employment Index remained essentially flat, registering 100.3 in May. ...

Read More
arrowcaret-downclosefacebook-squarehamburgerinstagram-squarelinkedin-squarepauseplaytwitter-squareyoutube-square