Costs that can be defined by behavior are most commonly classified as fixed costs, variable costs and semi-variable costs. Examples of fixed costs include:
The medical loss ratio (MLR) for the Peacock health plan is 80%. Peacock's expense ratio is 16%.
One characteristic of Peacock's MLR is that it
A financial analyst wants to learn the following information about the
Forest health plan for a given financial period:
In order to achieve its goal of improved customer service, the Evergreen Health Plan will add three new customer service representatives to its existing staff, install a new switching station, and install additional phone lines. In this situation, the cost that would be classified as a sunk cost, rather than a differential cost, is the expense associated with:
Analysts will use the capital asset pricing model (CAPM) to determine the cost of equity for the Maxim health plan, a for-profit plan. According to the CAPM, Maxim's cost of equity is equal to
The following information was presented on one of the financial statements prepared by the Rouge Health Plan as of December 31, 1998:
This type of financial statement is called:
Dr. Martin Cassini is an obstetrician who is under contract with the Bellerby Health Plan. Bellerby compensates Dr. Cassini for each obstetrical patient he sees in the form of a single amount that covers the costs of prenatal visits, the delivery itself, and post-delivery care . This information indicates that Dr. Cassini is compensated under the provider reimbursement method known as a:
The Titanium health plan's product has a unit price of $120 PMPM and a unit variable cost of $80 PMPM. Titanium has $100,000 in fixed costs per month. This information indicates that, for its product, Titanium's
Contingency risks, or C-risks, are general categories of risk that have a direct bearing on both the cash flow and solvency of a health plan. One of these C-risks, pricing risk (C-2 risk), is typically the most important risk a health plan faces. Pricing risk is crucial to a health plan’s solvency because:
The following examples describe situations that expose an individual or a health plan to either pure risk or speculative risk:
Example 1 — A health plan invested in 1,000 shares of stock issued by a technology company.
Example 2 — An individual could contract a terminal illness.
Example 3 — A health plan purchased a new information system.
Example 4 — A health plan could be held liable for the negligent acts of an employee.
The examples that describe pure risk are
Cascade Hospital has negotiated with the McBee Health Plan a straight per-diem rate of $1,000 per day for medical admissions. One of McBee’s plan members was admitted to Cascade for 10 days. Total billed charges equaled $10,000, of which $2,000 were for noncovered items. This information indicates that, for this admission, the amount that McBee was obligated to reimburse Cascade was:
The Danube Health Plan's planning activities include tactical planning, which is primarily concerned with
The Sesame health plan uses a method of accumulating cost data that enables the health plan to satisfy financial reporting requirements for compiling financial statements and corporate tax returns. Although this method assists Sesame's managers in studying which types of costs are rising and falling over time, it does not explain which areas of Sesame incur each cost. This method, which is the most basic level of cost accumulation, is known as accumulating costs by
The Column health plan is in the process of developing a strategic plan.
The following statements are about this strategic plan. Three of the statements are true, and one statement is false. Select the answer choice containing the FALSE statement.
Experience rating and manual rating are two rating methods that the Cheshire health plan uses to determine its premium rates. One difference between these two methods is that, under experience rating, Cheshire
With regard to alternative funding arrangements, the part of a health plan premium that is intended to contribute to the claims reserve that a health plan maintains to pay for unusually high utilization is known as the:
Ways in which a company can increase its return on investment (ROI) include:
1. Reducing expenses to increase operating income
2. Increasing controllable investment
The Coral Health Plan, a for-profit health plan, has two sources of capital:
Debt and equity. With regard to these sources of capital, it can correctly be stated that
The core of a health plan's strategic financial plan is the development of its pro forma financial statements. The following statements are about these pro forma financial statements. Select the answer choice containing the correct statement.
Mandated benefit laws are state or federal laws that require health plans to arrange for the financing and delivery of particular benefits. Ways that mandated benefits have the potential to influence health plans include:
1. Causing a lower degree of uniformity among health plans of competing health plans in a given market
2. Increasing the cost of the benefit plan to the extent that the plan must cover mandated benefits that would not have been included in the plan in the absence of the law or regulation that mandates the benefits
The sentence below contains two pairs of terms enclosed in parentheses.
Determine which term in each pair correctly completes the statement. Then select the answer choice containing the two terms that you have selected. In analyzing its financial data, a health plan would use (horizontal/common size financial statement) analysis to measure the numerical amount that corresponding items change from one financial statement to another over consecutive accounting periods, and the health plan would use (trend/vertical) analysis to show the relationship of each financial statement item to another financial statement item.
A health plan may experience negative working capital whenever healthcare expenses generated by plan members exceed the premium income the health plan receives.
Ways in which a health plan can manage the volatility in claims payments, and therefore reduce the risk of negative working capital, include:
1. Accurately estimating incurred but not reported (IBNR) claims
2. Using capitation contracts for provider reimbursement
The Wallaby Health Plan purchased an asset two years ago for $50,000. At the time of purchase, the asset had an appraised value of $52,000. The asset carries a value on Wallaby’s general ledger of $47,000, and its current market value is $80,000. According to the cost concept, Wallaby would report on its financial statements a value for this asset equal to:
The Raven Health Plan is domiciled in a state that requires the health plan to offer small employers and their employees a comprehensive healthcare benefit plan that approximates the healthcare benefits available to large employer-employee groups. This type of uniform benefit plan is known as:
Under the alternative funding method used by the Flair Company, Flair assumes financial responsibility for paying claims up to a specified level and deposits the funds necessary to pay these claims into a bank account that belongs to Flair. However, an insurer, which acts as an agent of Flair, makes the actual payment of claims from this account. When claims exceed the specified level, the insurer pays the balance from its own funds. No state premium tax is levied on the amounts that Flair deposits into this bank account.
From the following answer choices, choose the name of the alternative funding method described.
The Savanna health plan used a risk analysis technique which defines the key assumptions of Savanna's strategic financial plan in terms of mathematical formulas that can be correlated to each other or analyzed independently. This technique allowed Savanna to simulate probable future events on a computer and produce a distribution of possible outcomes. This risk analysis technique, which can be used to predict Savanna's distribution of expected claims, is known as
The Puma health plan uses return on investment (ROI) and residual income (RI) to measure the performance of its investment centers. Two of these investment centers are identified as X and Y. Investment Center X earns $10,000,000 in operating income on controllable investments of $50,000,000, and it has total revenues of $60,000,000. Investment Center Y earns $2,000,000 in operating income on controllable investments of $8,000,000, and it has total revenues of $10,000,000. Both centers have a minimum required rate of return of 15%.
One likely way in which Investment Center X or Y could effectively increase its ROI is by
Several federal agencies establish rules and requirements that affect health plans. One of these agencies is the Department of Labor (DOL), which is primarily responsible for _________.
Under the doctrine of corporate negligence, a health plan and its physician administrators may be held directly liable to patients or providers for failing to investigate adequately the competence of healthcare providers whom it employs or with whom it contracts, particularly where the health plan actually provides healthcare services or restricts the patient's/enrollee's choice of physician.
The NAIC has developed a risk-based capital (RBC) formula for all health plans that accept risk. One true statement about the RBC formula for health plans is that it
The Fiesta Health Plan prices its products in such a way that the rates for its products are reasonable, adequate, equitable, and competitive. Fiesta is using blended rating to calculate a premium rate for the Murdock Company, a large employer. Fiesta has assigned a credibility factor of 0.6 to Murdock. Fiesta has also determined that Murdock's manual rate is $200 PMPM and that Murdock's experience rate is $180 PMPM. Fiesta would correctly calculate that its blended rate PMPM for Murdock should be Fiesta's retention charge plus
A product is often described as having a thin margin or a wide margin. With regard to the factors that help determine the size of the margin of a health plan's product, it can correctly be stated that the
Advantages to a company that elects to self-fund and to administer all aspects of its healthcare benefit plan include:
A health plan can use a SWOT (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats) analysis to analyze its relationships with the major providers in each market in which it conducts business.
Geena Falk is eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid coverage. If Ms. Falk incurs a covered expense, then:
Experience rating methods can be either prospective or retrospective. With regard to these types of experience rating methods, it can correctly be stated that
One law prohibits Dr. Laura Cole from making a referral to another provider entity for designated health services if Dr. Cole or one of her immediate family members has a financial relationship with the entity. This law is known as the
Under GAAP, three approaches to expense recognition are generally allowed: associating cause and effect, systematic and rational allocation, and immediate recognition. A health plan most likely would use the approach of systematic and rational allocation in order to
The following statements illustrate the use of different rating methods by health plans:
From the following answer choices, select the response that correctly indicates the rating methods used by Dover and Rolling Hills.
The Sanford Group, a provider group, entered into a risk contract with a health plan. Sanford has purchased aggregate stop-loss coverage with an attachment point of 115% of the group's predicted healthcare costs of $2,000,000 for the year. Sanford has a copayment of 10% for any costs above the attachment point. If Sanford's actual costs for the year are $2,800,000, then, according to the terms of the aggregate stop-loss agreement, the amount that Sanford is responsible for is
Health plans sometimes use global fees to reimburse providers. Health plans would use this method of provider reimbursement for all of the following reasons EXCEPT that global fees
The Caribou health plan is a for-profit organization. The financial statements that Caribou prepares include balance sheets, income statements, and cash flow statements. To prepare its cash flow statement, Caribou begins with the net income figure as reported on its income statement and then reconciles this amount to operating cash flows through a series of adjustments. Changes in Caribou's cash flow occur as a result of the health plan's operating activities, investing activities, and financing activities.
Caribou is engaged in an operating activity when it
With regard to the financial statements prepared by health plans, it can correctly be stated that
Kevin Olin applied for individual healthcare coverage from the Mercury health plan. Before issuing the policy, Mercury's underwriters attached a rider that excludes from coverage any loss that results from Mr. Olin's chronic knee problem. This information indicates that Mr. Olin's policy includes
Provider reimbursement methods that transfer some utilization risk from a health plan to providers affect the health plan's RBC formula. A health plan's use of these reimbursement methods is likely to result in
A health plan that capitates a provider group typically provides or offers to provide stop-loss coverage to that provider group.
The Eagle health plan wants to limit the possibility that it will be held vicariously liable for the negligent acts of providers. Dr. Michael Chan is a member of an independent practice association (IPA) that has contracted with Eagle. One step that Eagle could take in order to limit its exposure under the theory of vicarious liability is to
The following paragraph contains an incomplete statement. Select the answer choice containing the term that correctly completes the statement. Health plans face four contingency risks (C-risks): asset risk (C-1), pricing risk (C-2), interest-rate risk (C-3), and general management risk (C-4). Of these risks, ________________ is typically the most important risk that health plans face. This is true because a sizable portion of the total expenses and liabilities faced by a health plan come from contractual obligations to pay for future medical costs, and the exact amount of these costs is not known when the healthcare coverage is priced.
If the Ascot health plan's accountants follow the going-concern concept under GAAP, then these accountants most likely
The following statements are about a health plan's pricing of a preferred provider organization (PPO) plan. Three of the statements are true, and one statement is false. Select the answer choice containing the FALSE statement.
With regard to the Medicaid program in the United States, it can correctly be stated that
The Caribou health plan is a for-profit organization. The financial statements that Caribou prepares include balance sheets, income statements, and cash flow statements. To prepare its cash flow statement, Caribou begins with the net income figure as reported on its income statement and then reconciles this amount to operating cash flows through a series of adjustments. Changes in Caribou's cash flow occur as a result of the health plan's operating activities, investing activities, and financing activities.
The main purpose of Caribou's balance sheet is to
Because a health plan cannot decline coverage for individuals who are eligible for conversion of group health coverage to individual health coverage, the bulk of the health plan's underwriting for conversion policies is accomplished through health plan design.
The provider contract that Dr. Zachery Cogan, an internist, has with the Neptune Health Plan calls for Neptune to reimburse him under a typical PCP capitation arrangement. Dr. Cogan serves as the PCP for Evelyn Pfeiffer, a Neptune plan member. After hospitalizing Ms. Pfeiffer and ordering several expensive diagnostic tests to determine her condition, Dr. Cogan referred her to a specialist for further treatment. In this situation, the compensation that Dr. Cogan receives under the PCP capitation arrangement most likely includes Neptune's payment for
The accounting department of the Enterprise health plan adheres to the following policies:
Of these Enterprise policies, the ones that are consistent with the accounting principle of conservatism are Policies
If Grace Wilson is eligible for benefits under both the Medicare and Medicaid programs, then
Rasheed Azari, the risk manager for the Tower health plan, is attempting to work with providers in the organization in order to reduce the providers' exposure related to utilization review. Mr. Azari is considering advising the providers to take the following actions:
Of these possible actions, the ones that are likely to reduce physicians' exposures related to utilization review include actions
This concept, which holds that a company should record the amounts associated with its business transactions in monetary terms, assumes that the value of money is stable over time. This concept provides objectivity and reliability, although its relevance may fluctuate.
From the following answer choices, choose the name of the accounting concept that matches the description.
The Kayak Company self funds the health plan for its employees. This plan is an example of a type of self-funded plan known as a general asset plan.
Because Kayak's plan is a general asset plan, the funds that Kayak sets aside for the health plan are