Abstract Employers and enrollees face premium growth and rising cost sharing, yet patients often don’t know what they will owe when they seek care. Traditional “consumerism” has struggled because quality is hard to observe, prices are difficult to estimate in real time, and many services are urgent. We review the evolution of employer plan design, from broad network Preferred Provider Organizations (PPOs) to narrow and tiered networks, and reference pricing to the new emerging “dynamic copay” plans. These plans translate negotiated price variation into provider- and service-specific dollar copays displayed pre-service, often through app-based tools enabled by Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services regulations, Transparency in Coverage data and AI-enabled analytics. Using UnitedHealthcare's Surest plan as an illustrative case, we examine the operational pre-requisites for “copay integrity,” likely effects on out-of-pocket (OOP) predictability and spending in light of peer-reviewed evidence on tiered designs, and the constraints imposed by health insurance literacy, the limited share of spending that is meaningfully shoppable below the OOP maximum, and the long-run attenuation of steering effects. We conclude by proposing that pairing dynamic copays with reference pricing, layered onto a tiered network, may better address these limitations by strengthening steerage, improving OOP predictability and aligning member shopping incentives with higher-value care.
Debbarma et al. (Fri,) studied this question.