Fiduciary Best Practices for Healthcare Plans

During a recent PLANSPONSOR webinar, experts discussed maintaining fiduciary oversight over health plans, especially the importance of updating plan documents, creating committees and monitoring vendors.

Just as fiduciaries must uphold their duties when managing their retirement plans, the same is true for health care plans, which require thorough documentation, requests for proposals, committee-member training and more.

When it comes to creating a “fiduciary process action plan,” Rory Kane Akers, vice president and a senior ERISA compliance attorney at Lockton Companies, said at last week’s PLANSPONSOR Roadmap livestream on health plan fiduciary duties that Step 1 is understanding who the plan fiduciaries are.

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“If you were to walk into a board meeting or a C-suite executive meeting and ask, ‘Who are the plan fiduciaries?’ I think everybody would sit on their hands,” Akers said. “The key here is to figure out who makes plan decisions to administer the plan appropriately.”

Akers said the plan document might name the plan sponsor or employer as the fiduciary, but it may not specifically name the vice president of human resources or the chief financial officer, for example. She said the company needs to identify the people in charge of hiring service providers and responsible for forwarding employee contributions, as the Employee Retirement Income Secure Act states that a fiduciary is anyone who exercises discretion with regard to the management and administration of the plan.

Jamie Greenleaf, co-founder of Fiduciary In a Box, said in recent litigation regarding health care plans, such as cases involving Johnson & Johnson and JPMorganChase, the lawsuits name the individual HR managers and board members. Greenleaf added that many plan sponsors have not spent enough time reviewing their plan documents and need to update documents to reflect some changes they have made to the design of the health benefits they offer.

“I think the easiest and biggest mistake that we traditionally see from most plan sponsors is they don’t even know where their plan document is, let alone if it’s in accordance with [changes they’ve made to the plan],” Greenleaf said.

Akers said she has found that plan documents also tend to be vague when it comes to health benefit plan eligibility.

“A lot of plan sponsors will implement standard plan designs for their [third-party administrator], and sometimes if you look at that document, there’s no clear criteria as to eligibility,” Akers said. “If you don’t have clear eligibility standards, the question when someone comes to you and says, ‘I think I should have benefits,’ becomes an even bigger question.”

Greenleaf added that some practical things a fiduciary should implement to ensure their health plan is up to fiduciary standards include:

  1. Establishing a governance committee;
  2. Reviewing and revising plan documents (as necessary);
  3. Identifying routine processes; and
  4. Consistently reviewing plan vendor performance and fees.

The governance committee should hold regular meetings to discuss plan operations, and it should keep detailed minutes of discussion points and decisions to illustrate proof of prudent oversight.

In terms of reviewing vendor performance, Akers said it is important to compare the value of services against others in the market and confirm that the TPA is carrying out any Consolidated Appropriations Act responsibilities that it accepted in writing.

“What we are starting to see is some of these vendor partners will, in contract terms, say they are fiduciaries with certain aspects of the plan,” Akers said. “I do think that the litigation [and] transparency rules have started a really good conversation, holding some of those vendors’ feet to the fire to say, ‘Are you fiduciaries?’ And I think it’s giving employers more willingness to push them to clearly put in their contracts that they are fiduciaries, to some extent.”

In September 2024, the ERISA Industry Committee called on Congress in an issue brief to deem pharmacy benefit managers as fiduciaries under ERISA, as they engage in practices that have the potential to raise costs for employees enrolled in employer-sponsored health plans.

A full recording of the webinar can be viewed here.

Economic Uncertainty Causes Financial Stress, Moves People To Take Action

Americans are determined to take control of their financial lives, yet most feel unprepared and only half trust themselves to get it right.

Forty-six percent (46%) of middle-income Americans expect to be worse off financially in the next year, up from 27% in December 2024, according to financial services company Primerica’s Q1Financial Security Monitor. Sixty two percent report stress over finances, up from 57% during the fourth quarter of 2024.

Only 18% believe their situation will improve in the next year, compared with 26% of respondents in the previous survey. Inflation continues to be the top concern of middle-income Americans, found the Primerica poll of 1,240 adults nationwide with incomes between $30,000 and $130,000.

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Resilience Adjustments

“Middle-income Americans continue to face significant financial stress, and they are not anticipating relief in the near future,” said Glenn Williams, CEO of Primerica, in a statement. “This makes having a clear financial game plan even more essential to helping families navigate whatever the future brings. Prioritization is key—understanding where to focus, what to adjust and how to stay on track amid economic uncertainty.”

To cope, respondents to the Primerica survey say that families are cutting back. Nearly 4 in 5 (78%) are limiting non-essential spending—the highest in two years. Sixty-four percent are saving for emergencies, up from 59% last year, and 52% are considering getting, or already have, a second job.

Planning for the Future

Americans are determined to take control of their financial lives, yet most feel unprepared and only half trust themselves to get it right, according to a new survey from debt solution company, Beyond Finance.

The study of 2,000 U.S. adults revealed that only 13% feel very good about their current financial situation, despite overwhelming agreement that long-term financial well-being is more critical than ever. Eighty four percent say setting themselves up for financial success is more important now in times of economic uncertainty.

More than half of respondents said they feel the same or more disillusioned with financial institutions than they did a year ago. That distrust appears to be becoming a catalyst for personal empowerment.

Generational Outlooks Diverge

The survey shows clear generational differences in optimism and financial planning. Gen Z is the most optimistic (59%) but also the most short-term focused (27%). Baby Boomers are more balanced, with 64% considering both short- and long-term goals. Millennials and Gen X are in the middle, driven by ambition but challenged by economic uncertainty, Beyond Finance found.

Even as Americans are largely managing their own finances—74% of the Beyond Finance respondents say they handle it themselves—emotional drivers like anxiety, lack of knowledge, and past missteps continue to erode financial confidence.

Despite these setbacks, survey results indicate that Americans are actively working to build their financial confidence in practical, repeatable ways this year. Most Americans (69%) say they are currently or planning to track their spending. Other responses included plans to: use budgeting apps (28%), listen to financial podcasts (23%) or talk more openly with family to break the money taboo (22%).

“There’s a growing movement around financial self-empowerment,” said Lou Antonelli, chief operating officer of Beyond Finance, in a statement. “We’re seeing people move from avoidance to action. It’s not just about fixing your finances — it’s about feeling capable and in control.”

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