- Key Insight: Discover how repayment benefits are reframing "coverage" into actionable healthcare access for employees.
- What's at Stake: Rising deferred care threatens workforce productivity, retention, and escalating employer healthcare expenses.
- Supporting Data: 40% of employer-insured Americans delay or skip care due to out-of-pocket costs.
Source: Bullets generated by AI with editorial review
As healthcare costs climb, more employees are delaying care or taking financial risks to keep up with medical bills.
According to healthcare technology and financial services company Paytient's recent "Hidden Lives of Workplace-Insured Americans" report, 40% of people with employer-sponsored health insurance are still
"These are people who have insurance," said Iveta Brigis, chief people officer at Paytient. "Coverage is no longer the same as access, and that distinction [should] matter just as much to employers as it does to employees."
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Currently, 56% of workplace-insured Americans are either delaying filling prescriptions, splitting pills to make them last, or they simply don't fill them, according to the survey. Forty-one percent are reaching for
Paytien's survey was based on responses from 1,516 participants and was supplemented by six months of in-home qualitative research and interviews with
"So when we talk about the healthcare affordability crisis, it's not just a personal finance story, it's a workforce performance story," Brigis said. "The two are completely inseparable."
Investing in a new approach
This is where repayment benefits such as Paytient aim to offer their services. Instead of employees having to pay large out-of-pocket healthcare costs all at once, employers offer workers access to a Paytient Visa card that can be used for eligible healthcare expenses such as doctor visits, prescriptions, dental care, vision services, mental health treatment and medical equipment. When a member uses the card, Paytient covers the upfront cost and then allows the member to
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The goal is to reduce the financial barriers that often prevent people from seeking care, filling prescriptions, or following treatment plans. Paytient's report found that 78% of Paytient users
"That is exactly what we set out to give people — the ability to be fully in a moment of crisis without a financial crisis running alongside it," Brigis said. "Solutions that address cost of care are not a nice-to-have anymore. They're filling a genuine gap that your current health plan alone cannot fill."
Rethinking the outlook on healthcare
There are many other ways organizations can address this issue before investing in repayment benefits and options. To begin, Brigis said employers should start by
Research shows a significant gap between having coverage and being able to use it, making it important for benefit leaders to understand and keep track of whether employees are taking care of themselves like attending preventive visits and going through with treatment plans. Organizations should be evaluating their benefits through the lens of affordability, not just the breadth of coverage, Brigis said.
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"What that does psychologically [for employees] is just as important as the mechanics," Brigis said. It removes the moment of question of 'can I afford this right now?' that causes people to put off care."
Ultimately, according to Brigis, addressing this issue is about timing. Being proactive now about
"Organizations that implement these frameworks now can stabilize claims and improve retention," Brigis said. "Those that delay will simply continue to absorb the escalating costs of deferred care and turnover."







