Health plan features changes

Nov. 23—The Benefits and Risk Management Department at Ector County ISD tries to be proactive in keeping the district's 4,200 employees healthy and keep costs reasonable. This year, though, costs are going up.

During open enrollment, Benefits and Risk Management reviews trends with the Medical Plan Committee. Director Yolanda Gordon said if they see high claims for certain medical conditions or prescriptions, they try to maintain the benefits that will keep the employees healthy with education and information.

"In a district of this size with 4,200 employees, we deal with (varying) amount of medical conditions. We meet quarterly with a medical plan committee, and determine what we need to do in order to maintain, not just the benefits that we have in place, but also the financial integrity of our medical trust," Gordon said.

"We are partially self-funded, so our goal is to maintain the health of that medical trust. In doing that, we basically try to provide as much as we can, as far as allowing our staff to have more than one option, not just having to go to their normal family doctor, but our ECISD Wellness Center," she added.

Premiums will increase this year for the first time since 2019. Gordon said for an employee only on Option 1, the most used plan, is going up $25.

The Health Savings Account went down to zero.

The item that went up the most is employee and spouse, employee and family, employee and child and employee and children. They also take stop-loss insurance to help offset a lot of the larger claims.

One of the larger segments is diabetes. Some 40 percent of district employees, spouses and dependents on the health plan are diabetic. Dr. Ramachandra Chemitiganti, regional chairman and associate professor at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center in Odessa, said it is alarming for the people that are diagnosed with the disease and for the district because it affects their healthcare budget.

Chemitiganti said it is alarming for the community, as well.

Nationally, he said, diabetes runs anywhere from 10 to 15 percent. In East Texas, some parts of South Texas and West Texas, it hit 14 percent, "so 1 in 7 or 1 in 10, depending on where you are looking, is a Type II diabetic. But 40 percent seems to be a significantly higher number," Chemitiganti said.

Looking at the state and national data, he said, for every one that is diagnosed as diabetic, there are three pre-diabetics.

It's not just one factor that plays into the rate of diabetes. It's sedentary lifestyle, lack of physical activity, limited access to quality food and mental stress.