David Hayes
FSA, MAAA
Principal and Consulting Actuary
Atlanta, GA, US
David is a principal and consulting actuary with the Atlanta office of Milliman. He first joined the firm in 1993 and returned to the firm in 2007.
Experience
David works with Blue Cross and Blue Shield plans, HMOs, health insurance carriers, providers, and non-profit organizations.
His client activities include the following:
- Pricing and rate development for commercial, Medicare Supplement, and Medicare Advantage products
- Product development, rating, and underwriting for various lines of business
- Preparation and/or review of commercial regulatory rate filings for both ACA and non-ACA products - individual, small group and large group
- ROI analyses for healthcare intervention programs including strategies surrounding components of risk-sharing arrangements
- Estimation of actuarial liabilities/assets for financial reporting, including year-end annual statement support
- Financial forecasting and trend development for commercial and Medicare plans
- Healthcare cost analytics and actuarial cost model development for use in benchmarking or performance analysis
- Small group compliance
- Evaluation of blocks of business
- Provider contract and capitation analysis and development
- TRICARE rate development and change order processing
Professional Designations
- Fellow, Society of Actuaries
- Member, American Academy of Actuaries
Education
- BBA, Finance, Georgia State University
- Master of Actuarial Science, Georgia State University
Publications
Read their latest work
Article
Provider-sponsored health plans: Tug o' war between providers and insurance
17 February 2021 - by David Hayes, Courtney R. White
This paper discusses how a provider-sponsored MCO and its parent health system can team together to create a unique player in the health insurance landscape, using major levers and how they can impact the success of each organization.
Article
Capital requirements for health insurers
03 March 2020 - by David Hayes, Rachel Killian, Shyam Kolli
What are considerations for health plans when determining capital requirements?