--- type: source title: "PHTI December 2025 Employer GLP-1 Approaches Report + Mercer 2026: Large Employer Coverage ≠ Small Employer Coverage — Resolving Session 31 Scope Mismatch" author: "Peterson Health Technology Institute / Mercer" url: https://phti.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/2025/12/PHTI-Employer-Approaches-to-GLP-1-Coverage-Market-Trend-Report.pdf date: 2025-12 domain: health secondary_domains: [] format: report status: unprocessed priority: high tags: [glp-1, employer-coverage, behavioral-mandate, large-employer, small-employer, scope, parity, obesity] intake_tier: research-task --- ## Content This archive resolves the Session 31 branching point: is the 34% behavioral mandate figure (Session 30) vs. 2.8M covered lives decline (Session 31) a scope mismatch or a divergence? **PHTI December 2025 Report:** - 34% of employers requiring behavioral support as GLP-1 coverage CONDITION (up from 10% — 3.4x in one year) - Survey methodology: employer-sponsored plans — the PHTI report covers primarily LARGE employers (those with sufficient scale to administer condition-based coverage) - "About half of all employers require members to meet certain clinical criteria above the FDA label" — applied to plans that have CHOSEN to cover GLP-1s at all **Mercer 2026 data:** - 90% of LARGE employers plan to continue GLP-1 coverage through 2026 - 86% of MID-MARKET employers plan to continue - Insurers offering small employer plans restricting obesity GLP-1 coverage starting January 1, 2026 **The scope mismatch resolution:** The two data points measure DIFFERENT populations: Population A (PHTI behavioral mandate 34%, Mercer 90% continuing): - Large employers (typically 500+ employees or self-insured) - These employers have ALREADY chosen to cover GLP-1s - Behavioral mandate means: "we cover, but you must participate in lifestyle support" - Adding conditions to coverage they're keeping → cost management, not elimination Population B (DistilINFO 3.6M → 2.8M covered lives decline, Session 31): - Health system-employed populations (Allina, RWJBarnabas, Ascension) - State government employees (4 states withdrawing coverage) - Kaiser California Medicaid/commercial (eliminating, not adding conditions) - Regional and small-group insurers restricting small employer plans **Conclusion: SCOPE MISMATCH, not DIVERGENCE** These are not contradictory trends in the same population. They are: - Large employer sophisticated response: keep coverage, add behavioral conditions (PHTI data) - Health system + state employer + small group response: drop coverage entirely (DistilINFO data) The net population-level picture: more sophisticated management for those who retain access; fewer people with access overall (3.6M → 2.8M covered lives = 22% decline in covered lives for weight management). **Additional scope finding (small employers):** - Mass General Brigham Health Plan example: small employers (under 50 subscribers) no longer offered GLP-1 obesity coverage as of January 1, 2026 - Employers with 50+ subscribers offered GLP-1 obesity coverage as an add-on option ## Agent Notes **Why this matters:** This resolves the most important open question from Session 31 (Direction A: scope mismatch investigation). The finding: the two data points are measuring different populations. This is NOT a KB divergence — it's a scope qualification that both claims need. The net access picture is worsening (22% decline in covered lives) even as the sophistication of coverage management at large employers increases. **What surprised me:** The threshold for being in the "sophisticated large employer" bucket appears to be much lower than I expected — 50 enrolled subscribers for Mass General Brigham's plan. Many mid-size companies (think: local restaurants, contractors, retail) fall below this threshold and face the small employer restriction. **What I expected but didn't find:** A breakdown of what percentage of total covered lives are in large employer vs. small employer plans for GLP-1. Without this, we can't calculate the net access impact. The 3.6M → 2.8M figure is the best population-level proxy. **KB connections:** - Resolves Session 31 branching point (Direction A confirmed — scope mismatch) - Enriches the GLP-1 access inversion framing: coverage is bifurcating by employer size, not just by payer type - The 22% covered lives decline (3.6M → 2.8M) is the net population-level result - Connects to the Medicaid layer (California, 4 states cutting) → total population-level access trajectory is downward **Extraction hints:** - This is primarily a musing clarification (resolves the branching point) rather than a new KB claim - IF extracted: "GLP-1 obesity coverage is bifurcating by employer size — large self-insured employers are keeping coverage with behavioral conditions while small group insurers are withdrawing coverage entirely, with the net population-level effect being a 22% decline in covered lives" - Scope qualifier: "covered lives for weight management indication" (GLP-1 for diabetes remains covered) **Context:** PHTI (Peterson Health Technology Institute) is a nonprofit health technology assessment organization. Mercer is a benefits consulting firm that surveys large employers annually. Both data sources are credible but represent different employer populations. ## Curator Notes (structured handoff for extractor) PRIMARY CONNECTION: GLP-1 covered lives decline + behavioral mandate claims (both Sessions 30-31) WHY ARCHIVED: Resolves the Session 31 branching point (scope mismatch, not divergence). The large employer vs. small employer split is the scope qualification that both claims need. The net population-level direction (22% decline in covered lives) is the summary statistic. EXTRACTION HINT: Use as scope qualification evidence rather than standalone claim. The key insight: what looks like a contradiction (behavioral mandates growing + covered lives declining) is actually two trends in different populations. The extractor should note this when reviewing Sessions 30-31 sources.