Fortune | FORTUNE 10月23日 01:26
健康保险费用飙升,雇主和员工面临压力
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美国雇主和员工正承受多年来最严重的健康保险费用上涨。KFF调查显示,2025年平均家庭保费接近2.7万美元,预计2026年将进一步大幅上涨。成本上升的主要驱动因素包括处方药(尤其是GLP-1类药物)、慢性病以及就医利用率的增加。为应对成本压力,雇主可能将更多成本转嫁给员工,收紧昂贵药物的覆盖范围,并采取更严格的计划设计。尽管政策讨论在进行,但目前尚未出现可行的解决方案。此次成本飙升是多重因素作用的结果,包括医院价格上涨、医护人员劳动力成本上升以及疫情期间推迟的医疗服务回流。预计2026年将出现十多年来最快的保费增长,除非采取有效的成本控制措施。

📈 **保费大幅上涨,家庭负担加重**:根据KFF的最新调查,2025年美国平均家庭健康保险保费已接近26,993美元,较前几年显著增长。预计2026年还将出现更大幅度的上涨。这一趋势给雇主和员工都带来了巨大的财务压力,迫使双方共同承担日益增长的医疗费用。

💊 **处方药和慢性病是主要推手**:雇主将处方药(特别是用于减肥和心脏代谢风险的GLP-1类药物)、慢性疾病的治疗以及就医利用率的增加列为导致成本上升的主要原因。随着这些医疗需求的增长,保险公司和雇主需要寻找更有效的成本控制策略。

⚖️ **成本转移和福利收紧成趋势**:面对持续上涨的保费,雇主正考虑将更多成本转嫁给员工,例如提高免赔额和自付比例,并可能收紧对昂贵药物(如GLP-1s)的覆盖范围。这种成本转移的策略虽然短期内能缓解雇主压力,但会加重员工的经济负担。

💡 **缺乏长效解决方案,政策面临挑战**:尽管健康保险成本的上升引起了广泛关注,但目前尚未出现明确的、可规模化的解决方案来有效遏制价格增长。医疗体系的复杂性、供应商的议价能力以及政治上的分歧,都使得制定有效的价格控制政策面临挑战。

U.S. employers and workers are being squeezed by the steepest run-up in health insurance costs in years, with average family premiums nearing $26,993 in 2025 and pressure building for even sharper increases in 2026, according to a recent KFF survey.

The near-term outlook points to renewed cost shifting to employees, tighter coverage for pricey drugs like GLP‑1s, and a louder policy debate over price growth—without an obvious, scalable fix in sight.

The new premium reality

KFF, a health research group, released an employer survey showing average family premiums rose about 6% in 2025 to roughly $26,993, with workers contributing about $6,850 toward the total. Employers cite prescription drugs, chronic disease, and elevated utilization as the leading cost drivers, according to a New York Times report of the survey. The five-year increase now totals approximately 26%, and preliminary indicators suggest another upward trend in 2026, absent meaningful cost containment.

Premium acceleration is not confined to the employer market; broader analyses point to rising costs across segments, with expectations that 2026 will bring the sharpest increases in over a decade if plan design changes don’t offset underlying trend. Employers are bracing for hikes approaching 9% in the absence of new limits, reinforcing the strain on benefits budgets and household finances.

Why costs are climbing

Several forces are converging: higher hospital prices, persistent inflation in provider labor, and heavier use of services as care deferred during the pandemic comes back online. A growing share of spending is tied to high‑cost drugs, including GLP‑1s for weight loss and cardiometabolic risks, which many employers covered in 2025 but may curb as budgets tighten.

Consolidation among health systems has strengthened negotiating leverage on rates, while improved access via virtual care has increased utilization, especially in behavioral health. Employers also flag specialty pharmacy growth and supply‑chain pressures, creating a cost stack that traditional benefit tweaks struggle to unwind.

Employers’ strained playbook

KFF’s CEO Drew Altman argues that corporate tools—from narrow networks and direct contracting to wellness, transparency, and chronic-care programs—have delivered only incremental gains because employers avoid pushing changes that trigger employee backlash. In a fragmented system with concentrated provider power, the go-to “quick savings” lever remains higher deductibles and cost-sharing when premiums spike.

With few new levers and a “quiet alarm bell” over GLP‑1 demand and hospital price increases, Altman warns of a likely return to cost shifting in 2026 and potential pullbacks or tighter management of weight‑loss drug coverage. He also notes that recent federal spending cuts do little to address underlying prices, leaving employers and families exposed to continued premium growth.

Workers pay the price

Experts warn that 2026 could bring the most significant benefit-cost jump since 2010, even after planned reductions, as employers accelerate plan changes that shift more costs to workers. In surveys, more than half of companies expect to raise deductibles, out-of-pocket maximums, or otherwise redesign plans to temper the trend. Employees should expect 6%–7% increases in paycheck deductions and tighter formularies.

Employers are increasingly scrutinizing pharmacy contracts and GLP‑1 coverage, with many exploring stricter eligibility, documentation, and network limitations to control spend, even as they invest in mental‑health access and “high‑performance” networks to steer care to lower‑cost, higher‑quality providers. These moves may blunt, but not reverse, the underlying cost trajectory.

Expiring subsidies

KFF’s briefing flags cost containment could become a bigger agenda item in D.C. as premium pressures intensify, but consensus on tackling prices—particularly hospital and drug costs—remains elusive. State experiments in hospital cost growth caps are emerging, yet the national framework lacks the alignment and bargaining power to bend trend in the near term.

Expiring or changing federal subsidies in other markets could steepen consumer exposure, with KFF estimating that lapsing enhanced premium tax credits would more than double average marketplace premium payments next year—evidence of how sensitive affordability is to policy scaffolding. While not directly the employer market, it highlights the stakes of price growth for households.

The 2026 outlook

Expect premium growth to outpace wage gains again, with employers leaning on tighter plan designs, higher employee cost shares, and closer management of specialty drugs such as GLP‑1s. If underlying drivers—provider prices, specialty pharmacy, and utilization—remain elevated, the next wave of employer responses could extend to narrower networks and more direct contracting, but disruption risk will limit scale.

Absent stronger price discipline at the system level, the most probable path is another year of elevated increases, renewed cost shifting, and selective benefit retrenchment—which together will test worker affordability, squeeze margins for smaller firms, and keep healthcare inflation a boardroom priority.

For this story, Fortune used generative AI to help with an initial draft. An editor verified the accuracy of the information before publishing. 

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健康保险 医疗成本 保费上涨 雇主负担 员工负担 处方药 GLP-1 慢性病 成本控制 KFF Health Insurance Healthcare Costs Premium Increases Employer Burden Employee Burden Prescription Drugs GLP-1 Chronic Disease Cost Containment KFF
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