J Occup Environ Med. 2014 Feb;56(2):136-44. doi: 10.1097/JOM.0000000000000081.
The Predictive Validity of the HERO Scorecard in Determining Future Health Care Cost and Risk Trends.
Goetzel RZ, Henke RM, Benevent R, Tabrizi MJ, Kent KB, Smith KJ, Roemer EC, Grossmeier J, Mason ST, Gold DB, Noeldner SP, Anderson DR.
Author information
- From the Emory University Institute for Health and Productivity Studies and Truven Health Analytics (Dr Goetzel), Bethesda, Md; Truven Health Analytics (Dr Henke), Cambridge, Mass; Truven Health Analytics (Ms Benevent), Santa Barbara, Calif; Truven Health Analytics (Dr Tabrizi), Bethesda, Md; Emory University Institute for Health and Productivity Studies (Ms Kent, Ms Smith, and Dr Roemer), Washington, DC; StayWell Health Management (Drs Grossmeier and Anderson), St Paul, Minn; Wellness & Prevention Inc (Dr Mason), Johnson & Johnson and Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Ann Arbor, Mich; Mercer (Dr Gold), Minneapolis, Minn; and Mercer (Dr Noeldner), Irvine, Calif.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE:
To determine the ability of the Health Enhancement Research Organization (HERO) Scorecard to predict changes in health care expenditures.
METHODS:
Individual employee health care insurance claims data for 33 organizations completing the HERO Scorecard from 2009 to 2011 were linked to employer responses to the Scorecard. Organizations were dichotomized into "high" versus "low" scoring groups and health care cost trends were compared. A secondary analysis examined the tool's ability to predict health risk trends.
RESULTS:
"High" scorers experienced significant reductions in inflation-adjusted health care costs (averaging an annual trend of -1.6% over 3 years) compared with "low" scorers whose cost trend remained stable. The risk analysis was inconclusive because of the small number of employers scoring "low."
CONCLUSIONS:
The HERO Scorecard predicts health care cost trends among employers. More research is needed to determine how well it predicts health risk trends for employees.
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