Record-high medical trend rate in Asia: Practical strategies for employers to protect budgets and employee well-being
Record-high medical trend rate threatens Asia’s workforce. What can employers do?
Medical trend rates in Asia are projected to reach 12.5% in 2026, 1.4 percentage points above the global average and nearly six times inflation. As medical costs rise and societal dynamics shift, employers in Asia are under increasing pressure to balance cost containment with the need to support evolving employee needs.
This is especially critical as benefits play a central role in supporting retention, workforce resilience, and employee trust. Employers are also managing demographically divergent workforces, with varying needs across age groups, family structures, and life stages.
In this environment, blunt cost-cutting can introduce new risks to employee experience and erode long-term workforce value. Employers now need to manage rising medical trend rates and healthcare cost management with smarter benefits design, without losing sight of what employees need from their benefits.
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Preventive care isn’t just a benefit: It breaks the cycle of surging medical bills
Preventive care is one of the most effective ways to manage long-term healthcare costs. Supporting healthy aging across the workforce helps reduce the likelihood of more serious conditions and expensive treatments later. Preventive care programs are not just for the well. They include vaccinations, health screenings, and chronic disease management to help employees manage or improve their health.
When risks are identified and addressed early, organizations can reduce avoidable claims while supporting better health outcomes for employees. Well-designed wellness programs and early intervention strategies can also steer employees towards a more proactive role in their health. While the full impact may not be recognized within a single plan year given the long-term nature of health, organizations can see increased employee engagement as an additional advantage.
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Power through knowledge: Empower employees to make smarter health and financial decisions
Employers can support their workforce to take greater ownership of their health and related financial decisions through practical guidance and ongoing education. Employees can better understand their coverage and care options through the following initiatives:
- Health workshops.
- Targeted health campaigns.
- Improved benefits navigation tools through clear communication channels.
When employees are better informed, they are empowered to make decisions about when, where, and how to seek care. This can lead to informed benefits utilization, improved health outcomes, and better control of overall healthcare spend.
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The end of one-size-fits-all benefits: Data-driven benefits redesign can save your bottom line
Benefits need to reflect the realities of a more diverse workforce. One-size-fits-all plans often fall short in addressing the needs of employees across varying life stages, family structures, and health risks. Employers should review claims data, workforce demographics, and utilization patterns to identify where existing plans are no longer effective.
Based on these insights, employers can personalize benefits with options including co-pay structures, opt-in opt-out models, and limit adjustments to improve affordability while keeping coverage relevant and competitive.
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Steer employees towards high-value care: Why insurers are changing the game
Insurers in Asia are evolving, with many moving away from managing health insurance as a product line to a separate business unit to meet the needs of businesses and employees. This means more investment in specific capabilities such as network management and care steerage as specialized functions. These may include:
- Selective network design.
- Processes like prior authorization.
- Care triage and care pathways.
With these, high-value care can be delivered at the right time and in the right setting when needed.
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Time to rethink healthcare cost management: Premium negotiations alone will not save you
As premiums continue to rise, employers are likely to prioritise premium negotiation. While this can provide short-term cost relief, it does little to change utilization patterns, treatment pathways, or the overall cost of care. Businesses can consider to:
- Take a broader view on prevention.
- Address underlying drivers of claims.
- Design benefits that reflect workforce needs.
- Improve access to high-value care.
Employers are likely to see positive outcomes with more time spent engaging with employees on their health and well-being — striking a balance between economics and empathy.
We need to take a broader view of cost containment that considers plan design levers that drive better system efficiency and outcomes and not just remove costs. As we spend more time with insurers to evaluate how plans are administered, we also work towards understanding the different ways employees value and use their benefits. This will ultimately result in sustainable plan design, value-based care and a healthy, engaged workforce.
Case study: How Mercer Marsh Benefits used a data-led approach to improve health and cost outcomes for a technology company in Asia
A large technology company with a significant Asia-Pacific footprint faced persistently high premium increases, alongside musculoskeletal and mental health concerns and low utilization of panel providers.
Instead of focusing solely on premium negotiations, Mercer Marsh Benefits helped the organization combine demographics, screening, and claims data to better understand current and emerging risks. This informed a targeted response, including plan design changes to improve panel utilization, telehealth incentives, stronger communications, and a more integrated approach to mental health and chronic disease management.
This resulted in a projected 5% to 10% improvement in loss ratio, alongside increased screening participation and higher telemedicine use. It clearly illustrates that managing healthcare costs does not come from reducing benefits alone, but rather from improving how benefits plans are designed and used efficiently.
By moving beyond price-only discussions and using demographics, screening and claims data to redesign care, we improved panel utilization and screening participation among our employees. This underscored our ability to manage costs effectively through smarter care design and engagement instead of benefits cuts, while still providing care for our employees.