Humana Aims To Phase Out Hiring Of Smokers, Where Permitted
May 12 2011 - 3:08PM
Dow Jones News
Health insurer Humana Inc. (HUM) intends to phase out the hiring
of smokers, where legally permitted--a move in keeping with its
message that employers should encourage healthy behavior among
workers.
The Louisville, K.Y. company already has a policy of not hiring
smokers in southwestern Ohio, except for those who commit to
stopping the habit. Humana plans to announce soon it won't hire any
smokers in another state, Chief Executive Michael McCallister said,
and it eventually plans to extend the practice nationally.
"We want to begin a long transition to an environment where it's
not something people do," he said in an interview Thursday. He aims
to institute the policy "wherever I can," although he concedes
there are numerous states where Humana would not be permitted to
bar employment on the basis of smoking.
Humana won't be the first employer to implement such a hiring
ban. For a couple decades, Alaska Air Group Inc.'s (ALK) Alaska
Airlines has declined to hire smokers. More recently, a number of
U.S. hospitals, including the Cleveland Clinic, have instituted
bans on hiring smokers, including screening potential hires for
nicotine.
These policies have stirred criticism from smokers' rights
advocates and even some health proponents.
"It's employment discrimination, and I don't think that
employers should be engaging in discrimination, whether it's legal
or not," said anti-smoking advocate Michael Siegel, professor in
the department of community health sciences at Boston University's
School of Public Health.
Siegel believes every workplace should be smoke-free and
supports smoking bans for restaurants, bars and casinos. Bans on
hiring smokers are different, in his view.
"It is making employment decisions based on a category to which
a person belongs rather than to their actual bona fide
qualifications for a job," and that could lead to bans on hiring
overweight people, parents of young children or people who play
hockey in their free time, he said.
Altria Group Inc.'s (MO) Philip Morris USA, the largest U.S.
tobacco company, believes that "refusing to hire an applicant ...
because this person is a tobacco user outside of the workplace is
unfair and in some states is in fact illegal," spokesman Ken Garcia
said. "It unjustly penalizes these applicants ... for use of what
is a legal product."
Humana isn't instituting similar bans on hiring overweight
workers or drinkers or fast drivers, although it does require
employees, in order to receive coverage, to complete a health-risk
assessment every year that includes information about such
conditions or behavior. Restricting hiring based on weight is
trickier than doing so for smoking, McCallister said.
The insurer, like many of its peers, also wants its employer
clients to embrace the idea that they can curb health-care spending
and improve productivity by promoting healthy employee behavior.
Humana's new Vitality wellness program--offered via a joint venture
with Vitality parent Discovery Holdings Ltd. (DCYHY,
DSY.JO)--encourages healthy behavior by offering discounts and
rewards to participating health-plan members.
McCallister also chairs the World Economic Forum's Workplace
Wellness Alliance formed at the group's summit in Davos,
Switzerland. The alliance is using research to try to build a case
for encouraging healthy lifestyles for employees, he said.
While health insurers' medical costs have increased at a more
moderate rate recently as patients' demand for services has
lightened during the economic downturn, McCallister said, "the
fundamental problem of health care has not gone away, that costs
are too high and they're growing too fast."
On another topic, McCallister said he expects "significant
movement" among small and mid-size employers to drop group health
coverage and give employees money to buy their own insurance once
guaranteed coverage required by the U.S. health overhaul goes into
effect in 2014.
Humana, which already focuses on individual consumers in its
large Medicare Advantage market for seniors, is "moving our DNA ...
toward the individual relationship," the CEO said. Industry-wide,
the group health insurance market isn't a growth area, he said.
-By Dinah Wisenberg Brin, Dow Jones Newswires, 215-982-5582;
dinah.brin@dowjones.com
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