Category — Worksite Wellness Programs
Wellness Program Budgets.
Trying to do more with less money? Here are three proven ways to align the dollars and cents of a wellness program in your budget.
Common thread - the way you prepare - and control - your budget for a wellness program is critical to its success.
1. Top-down budget
Depending on the size of your organization and wellness program, you may have full budget responsibility or might need to work with a C-level who has budgeting expertise.
Regardless of the arrangement, you’re likely to face one of two distinct challenges - a top-down budget or a zero-based budget.
A top-down budget is when you’re given a finite dollar amount and told to run the wellness program within the limit. If that’s the case, here are three crucial questions to ask -
Does this limit include money set aside for staff member incentives and future initiatives?
Should we keep long-tenured programs that keep going up in price, and
Does Benefits/HR have to deliver all education about the program, or is there additional funding to hire staff?
2. Zero-based budgeting
In zero-based funding, you submit to executive management an itemized list of the programs/features you want and the cost of each. Best practices -
Rank programs by priority (health-risk assessments must be at or near the top)
Indicate which expenses are fixed and which are variable, and
List ways to incorporate existing resources (like an EAP program) for a better return on investment.
3. Estimating ROI
On average, wellness programs normally take at least 18 months to break even. After three years, you ought to see savings.
When not, it’s time to take a fresh look at the program design.
July 29, 2010 No Comments
Staff Member obesity.
Thinking about an obesity-related disease management (DM) program for your organization? Here’s what you need to know.
In order to be effective, the program must meet participants’ individual medical and psychological needs, not to mention your own organization’s need to control long-term medical costs.
How wide-reaching should the program be? After all, it doesn’t make sense to pay for services your workers don’t want or can’t use.
Mary Beth Chalk of Resources for Living suggests that obesity programs can be broken down into four tiers of staff member need, from which your organization’s return on investment (ROI) can also be measured.
Tier 1 - Education
Tier I staff members struggle with weight management problems but don’t need a health coach. Instead, they might benefit from a self-directed program that provides weight-management related materials online, targeted mailing, and/or access to nurse call line.
How to measure ROI - utilization. Do staff members click on the Web site? Do they return to the site regularly? Do people use the nurse line? Your program vendor ought to provide you detailed use stats.
Tier 2 - Clinical supervision
If the staff member has been diagnosed as obese - a BMI score over 30 is obese, over 35 is clinically obese - he or she would do better working with a health coach in a clinically supervised program.
Three keys to getting maximum results -
1. Periodically have participants rate their relationship with their health coaches. Not everyone clicks, so a change may be in order.
2. Coordinate your disease management (DM) care with your worker assistance program (EAP)services. Reason - Inability to control weight is often closely tied with mental health issues - and one can negatively affect the other. the more closely your employee assistance program and obesity program managers work together, the higher the chance for success.
3. Beware of the fade-out effect. Many workers in weight-loss programs get off to a great begin and then fall back into old habits. Individuals should re-commit to the program after three sessions, four months and nine months.
To measure ROI, look at utlization, goal achievement and lowered presenteeism. of course, presenteeism is notoriously challenging to measure with reliable dollar figures. So how can you overcome that problem?
Start with employees’ salaries. Let’s suppose one participant earns $40,000 per year.
Ask employees to self-report how energetic and productive they feel on the job, on a percentage scale. Then have supervisors estimate the employee’s productivity and split the difference. for this example, let’s assume it averaged to 50%.
Collect scores again six months and one year into the program and then multiply the difference by salary. the result is your estimated productivity ROI.
In the example above, when the worker earning $40,000 improves from 50 percent to 75 percent after one year, the productivity related ROI is $10,000.
Tier 3 - Medical management
At this level, the obese employee needs a higher level of care than a health coach can offer. the employee has chronic medical conditions related to obesity - such as diabetes, high blood pressure, and/or sleep apnea - and needs a doctor case manager. In particular, the employee needs to set up regular visits with the doctor and create a treatment plan.
To measure ROI, begin with the lower-tier criteria, then track quarterly and year differences in FMLA or paid absences, and prescription drug costs. Then compare it to the per-participant cost of the obesity program.
Tier 4 - Morbid obesity
At this level, the employee has been diagnosed as morbidly obese - Body Mass Index (BMI) over 40 - and is considered a potential candidate for gastric bypass surgery.
ROI is measured through ongoing health claims as well as the previous criteria.
July 28, 2010 No Comments
Lobby groups take aim at wellness programs.
Given the immense growth of wellness programs over the last two years, it was inevitable resistance would creep up among watchdog groups.
In Washington, lobbyists have spearheaded a push for Congress, the DOL and IRS to crack down on “punitive” wellness programs.
Namely, the groups seek to limit programs in which employees’ share of their medical costs are directly tied to their willingness to participate in a wellness program.
HIPAA’s non-discrimination rules prohibit corporations from creating negative financial incentives for employees with health risks.
For instance, you can’t raise someone’s premium share because he or she smokes. What you can do is offer a discount if someone completes a use of tobacco cessation program.
Reason - the law does allow for financial incentives to staff members who willingly participate in wellness programs.
The watchdog groups seek greater regulation to make certain incentives and discounts are used only as rewards for healthy behavior, not as a thinly veiled form of discrimination against high-risk workers.
July 27, 2010 No Comments
Smaller Companys Adopting Disease Management.
A recent survey finds nearly 42 percent of employers with 200 or fewer staff members have some sort of disease management program.
That’s a immense increase from four years ago, when just 28% of smaller corporations offered such programs.
There’s more to come, too. Fifteen percent of respondents that didn’t currently have a disease management component to their health plan hope to add one by 2011.
The highest-demand disease management (DM) programs are for diabetes, asthma and heart illness.
Source - Small Company Benefits Survey, PDR Consulting Group, 9/1/2008.
July 26, 2010 No Comments
Obesity Management Programs - Key Measures.
Thinking about an obesity-related disease management (DM) program for your organization? Here’s what you need to know.
In order to be effective, the program must meet participants’ individual medical and psychological needs, not to mention your own organization’s need to control long-term health costs.
How wide-reaching should the program be? After all, it doesn’t make sense to pay for services your workers don’t want or can’t use.
Mary Beth Chalk of Resources for Living suggests that obesity programs could be broken down into four tiers of staff member need, from which your organization’s return on investment (ROI) can also be measured.
Tier 1 - Education
Tier I employees struggle with weight management problems but don’t need a health coach. Instead, they could benefit from a self-directed program that provides weight-management related materials online, targeted mailing, and/or access to nurse call line.
How to measure ROI - utilization. Do workers click on the Web site? Do they return to the site regularly? Do individuals use the nurse line? Your program vendor should provide you detailed use stats.
Tier 2 - Clinical supervision
If the employee has been diagnosed as obese - a Body Mass Index score over 30 is obese, over 35 is clinically obese - he or she would do better working with a health coach in a clinically supervised program.
Three keys to getting maximum results -
1. Periodically have participants rate their relationship with their health coaches. Not everyone clicks, so a change might be in order.
2. Coordinate your disease management care with your staff member assistance program (EAP)services. Reason - Inability to control weight is often closely tied with mental health issues - and one can adversely affect the other.
The more closely your EAP and obesity program managers work together, the higher the chance for success.
3. Beware of the fade-out effect. A lot of employees in weight-loss programs get off to a great start and then fall back into old habits. People should re-commit to the program after three sessions, four months and nine months.
To measure ROI, look at utlization, goal achievement and decreased presenteeism. of course, presenteeism is notoriously challenging to measure with reliable dollar figures. So how can you overcome that problem?
Start with employees’ salaries. Let’s suppose one participant earns $40,000 per year.
Ask workers to self-report how energetic and productive they feel on the job, on a percentage scale. Then have supervisors estimate the employee’s productivity and split the difference. for this example, let’s assume it averaged to 50%.
Collect scores again six months and one year into the program and then multiply the difference by salary. the result is your estimated productivity ROI.
In the example above, if the staff member earning $40,000 improves from 50% to 75% after one year, the productivity related ROI is $10,000.
Tier 3 - Medical management
At this level, the obese worker needs a higher level of care than a health coach can offer. the worker has chronic medical conditions related to obesity - like diabetes, high blood pressure, and/or sleep apnea - and needs a doctor case manager.
Namely, the worker needs to set up regular visits with the doctor and develop a treatment plan.
To measure ROI, start with the lower-tier criteria, then track quarterly and year differences in FMLA or compensated absences, and prescription drug costs. Then compare it to the per-participant cost of the obesity program.
Tier 4 - Morbid obesity
At this level, the worker has been diagnosed as morbidly obese - Body Mass Index (BMI) over 40 - and is considered a potential candidate for gastric bypass surgery.
ROI is measured through ongoing health claims as well as the previous criteria.
July 25, 2010 No Comments
Starting a Wellness Program.
Develop a culture of wellness within your organization
Create Exemplary Management Support
In the most successful Wellness Programs, upper managers lead their organizations by example. and they work to ensure that the management structure not only allows, but actively encourages their staff members to participate.
Organize a Wellness Advisory Team
Wellness committees serve as the eyes, ears, arms and legs of the program, representing colleagues ideas and concerns, and assisting reshape the organizational culture toward health.
Conduct an Assessment of Financial and Human Assets and Liabilities
Successful Wellness Programs are built upon a foundation of information, including claims review, demographic analysis of the workforce, management and worker surveys, health risk data, history of organizational wellness, and health benefit plan design.
Develop Obviously Reported Vision, Mission and Outcomes
Establish a clear vision of program direction, expectations and measures to answer the questions, “Where are we going and how will we know when we get there?”
Create a Comprehensive and Strategic Wellness Program
A multi-component plan ought to consist of strategically developed and implemented awareness, lifestyle change, and supportive environment programs, in addition to policies and activities that target appropriate health risk behaviors and needs of the workers.
Identify an Incentive and Reward Strategy
Incentives show the organizational commitment to the program and motivate individuals to participate. Incentives vary commonly from program to program, but can include such things as time off, reduction in health insurance premiums or co-pays, cash incentives, discounts to health clubs, free pedometers, etc.
Communicate to Employees
Your program ought to be simple and concise, use an identifiable brand, and rely on a selection of media to communicate with workers and managers.
Evaluate Outcomes
Evaluate program participation, satisfaction levels and behavioral change. You could want to track the number of workers’ compensation claims, productivity, turnover morale and absenteeism.
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Wellness Program - Management Support.
Develop Exemplary Management Support
Goal - A Wellness Program established into the organization’s culture.
Focus - Create support and excitement for the program from all levels of the corporation - senior management, mid-level management, and grass-roots staff members.
Obtaining upper management’s buy-in is essential to launching an effective program. the workers must understand that management is supportive of the wellness program.
Actions -
Develop an Senior Level Management Executive Team to determine high-level decisions - positions that should be included are the Chief Executive Officer, Chief Operating Officer, Chief Financial Officer, Communications Officer, and other appropriate division-level managers and program specialists, as necessary.
The Senior Management Executive Team will -
Communicate to all levels of management about the program and drive the integration of the Wellness Program as a part of the company culture.
Ensure that organizational resources are available for program planning and implementation.
Make certain to encourage employees to participate and to assist in “recruiting” other employees, get the momentum going, and keep it growing.
Share success stories within the corporation, and continue to raise the perceived value of participation.
Organize a Wellness Advisory Team
Goal - Develop a working committee that consists of staff members and essential functional parts of the organization.
Focus - to assist in reshaping the organizational culture to support employee-wellness activities by serving as messengers and supporters for the program.
Wellness Advisory Committees serve as an essential part of the infrastructure of your Wellness Program. the team members are the eyes, ears, arms, and legs of the program.
They represent their coworkers by sharing ideas and concerns about the wellness program.
Actions -
The Wellness Advisory Committee will -
Make certain to work with upper management and the Wellness Program coordinator in the design, implementation, and investigation of the program.
Develop methods to enhance the acceptance and success of the activities of your Wellness Program by encouraging worker ownership of the program.
Hold periodic meetings to keep the committee informed of upcoming plans and events and to provide feedback to the program coordinator about their thoughts, ideas, and suggestions, and those of their peers.
Recommend policy and environmental changes that are aimed at improving the health and safety of employees.
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Wellness Program - Vision and Mission.
Goal - Develop a baseline of information and identify human and organizational needs.
Focus - Review a variety of information to better understand past and current conditions regarding health-care utilization, organizational culture, demographic overview, and health-promotion initiatives.
Data collection plays an important role in planning, monitoring, and evaluating a wellness program. It will also set the baseline for continued and future analysiss of program efficiency, effectiveness, and feasibility.
Actions -
Claims review (health care, pharmaceutical) -
What have been the 10 most expensive major illness categories in each of the past five years? What are the number of claims and dollars paid for each?
What have been the 10 most costly therapeutic courses of drugs in each of the past five years? What are the number of claims and dollars paid for each?
What have been the 10 most frequently prescribed and filled therapeutic courses of drugs in each of the past five years? What are the number of claims and dollars paid for each?
Demographic analysis of employee population (may include dependents) -
List your number of employees, by gender, for each of the past five years and the percentages of males and females by age groups.
Think about any other factors that might have affected the health of your workers and their use of the health-care system.
This may include mergers, acquisitions, workplace trauma, staff member strikes, layoffs, early retirement offers, etc.
Management survey -
Conduct surveys of mid-level management to understand their concerns and measure their level of interest and buy-in.
Employee-interest survey - Gather information to find out what the workers want and to measure the level of participation, satisfaction, and “success” of any previous activities.
Risk data (health-risk assessments) -
is there any data from health-risk appraisals over the past five years?
Participation in similar activities -
List and describe all wellness programs that have been implemented over the past five years, including participation rates.
Design of the health plan, and anticipated changes -
Have there been any meaningful changes in the health plan’s design in each of the past five years, like a change from an HMO to a PPO, increased co-payments or deductibles, or increased employee contributions?
Develop Clearly Stated Vision, Mission and Outcomes
Goal - Establish a clear vision of program direction, expectations, and measures.
Focus - Setting a vision, mission, objectives and objectives to keep your Wellness Program focused toward its desired outcomes. It’ll answer the questions, “Where are we going?” and “How’ll we know when we get there?”
Actions -
Identify two to five obviously announced goals. Make certain that your program is capable of having an impact in the area desired, and be certain that you are capable of measuring that impact.
Example Goal - Workers having access to healthier food options
Establish two to five measurable goals that in particular state what your program is going to accomplish, by when, how, and how it will be measured.
Example Objective - Modify all vending machines to include 50 percent healthy food options.
Identify a few activities that will help you achieveyour objective. Activities are very specific.
Example Activity - Be sure to work with vending machine owners to identify healthy food choices and restock with 50 percent of items that are healthier food choices.
Identify who’s going to do what, by when, and what resources are needed.
Example Detail - the Program coordinator will contact XXX Vending Corporation by September 30.
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Wellness Program Incentives.
Create a Extensive and Strategic Wellness Program
Goal - A extensive Wellness Program plan.
Focus - Development of a plan that consists of a selection of awareness, lifestyle change, and supportive environment program, policies, and activities that’ll target risk behaviors, needs, and interests of workers.
Your Wellness Program should provide an integrated, strategic approach specific to the needs, objectives, and culture of your organization, designed throughout an annual cycle.
It’ll be important to review and revise existing policies governing such areas as smoking, vending machines, and the staff cafeteria. Additionally, it’s useful to examine what corporate wellness or health-promotion activities are offered under your existing health-benefit plan.
Actions -
Create activities based on your program goals and the specific needs of your employees. Focus on those topics that are of greatest interest to your employees and the greatest needs of your corporation, in that order. Prevent topics with narrow appeal.
Keep it simple. Design the program so it’s easy for the participants to understand and track. Let staff members focus their learning efforts on their own behavior, not on the rules and regulations of the program.
Additionally, simplify the program administration. Let individuals record their own activities when possible; create a mixture of self-reported activities along with verified activities.
Integrate a combination of activities to include awareness, educational, and behavior elements. Link the activities throughout the year to allow for desired behavior repetition.
Choose activities that every staff member can participate in.
Examples -
Challenges - Activities that focus on practicing a desired behavior and continue for 4-8 weeks and focus on specific topics (like physical activity, nutrition, or stress management).
Learning experiences (seminars, videos, classes) - One-time activities that last for a relatively short time and focus on a specific topic; these can precede “challenge activities” to prepare participants for behavior change.
Behavior changes (such as use of tobacco cessation) - Interventions may or might not be offered at the workplace; person should be encouraged to make lifestyle changes that they wanted to make even without the incentive.
Disease management (support and education groups for diabetes and hypertension) - These may be provided or supported by the corporation through disease-management providers, or by community, health, or religious organizations.
New skills (first aid, cardiopulmonary resuscitation) - These might be provided or supported by the corporation, or by community, health, or religious organizations.
Screenings, wellness assessments, physical exams - A wellness assessment provides the business with aggregate data that may be used in program planning and analysis; preventive screenings and physical exams may be encouraged by awarding credits to staff members.
Program support (membership or leadership in wellness committee or challenge team) - Reward those who work with you to help make your Wellness Program a success.
Community events - Reward participation in events like the Heart Walk or March of Dimes Walk; limit the number of these events that may be counted toward the annual total, and be selective about which events you allow to be counted.
Create an Incentive Strategy
Goal - to motivate and reward staff member participation and completion.
Focus - Create a sense of interest in participation and completion of wellness activities.
Providing incentives and rewards will send an important message to the workers that the organization is committed to improving their health and will share the rewards that these changes will bring. It also plays a meaningful role in motivating person to participate.
Actions -
Identify through staff members what incentives they value most.
Identify what incentives the organization can provide.
Integrate your incentives into your benefits strategy.
Ensure that every participant who achieves a goal receives some recognition.
Offer participation incentives.
Prevent offering incentives for the “best” or the “most.”
Avoid rewards for biometric changes.
Use incentives to promote your Wellness Program, through logos and branding.
Examples -
Paid time off, reduction in medical insurance premiums or co-pays, cash incentives, discounts to fitness centers, free pedometers, etc.
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Wellness Program Communication.
Goal - Increase awareness of and participation in the Wellness Program.
Focus - Promote the Wellness Program to workers to encourage participation in activities and benefits.
A well-designed communications strategy is paramount to successful program awareness and participation. Even a “world class” program design won’t succeed when nobody knows that it is available or how to get involved.
Staff Members who don’t get involved in the program must be doing so because they choose not to participate, not because they didn’t know about how, when, or where to participate.
Actions -
Conduct a Resources and Communications Audit to identify internal and external resources available to support your Wellness Program, as well as knowing how information will be disseminated.
Keep the program simple and concise - easy to peruse about, understand, and act upon.
Build the brand; be sure it’s something that staff members can identify with. Add the brand to T-shirts, water bottles, mouse pads, stress balls, etc.
Use a selection of media -
Print - flyers, fliers, posters, banners, paycheck inserts, newsletter articles, bulletin boards, literature racks, post cards.
Electronic - Web, intranet, e-mail, closed-circuit TVs, sign lines, audiovideo productions.
Staff meetings and organization events; word of mouth.
Use existing channels of communication - what works best in your company - and make sure to know about all points of contact and systems of distribution.
Timing for communications -
Prior to activity to create awareness and to educate.
During activity to stimulate participation.
After an activity to report results.
Between activities to maintain momentum and interest.
Consistency of communications -
Use branding; maintain a consistent look, feel, and tone of messages.
Maintain this consistency throughout the program.
Surveys and forms -
Collect information.
Disseminate information.
July 24, 2010 No Comments
Selecting the Right Type of Wellness Program.
Studies show that untargeted health-promotion campaigns have little long-term impact.
Chronic conditions, which rob individuals and families of their health and happiness, represent major costs to employers in the form of health-care and disability costs, lost productivity, and absenteeism.
Wellness Programs should address risky behaviors that can help your employees eat healthier, increase their level of exercise, help reduce stress, lower blood pressure (BP) and cholesterol, and quit tobacco use. Wellness programs should focus on helping employees achieve and maintain their optimal health status.
Robust worksite-health programs focused on changing lifestyle behavior have been shown to yield a $3 to $6 return on investment for each dollar invested. It takes about three to five years after the initial program investment to realize these savings.
Ninety-three% of USA corporations offer some kind of health-promotion program for their workers, but is it the right type?
Main Kinds of Wellness Programs
Programs focusing on disease management. These programs monitor and treat specific diseases. Disease management follows the 80/20 rule - 80% of health-care costs are spent on 20% of employees.
Disease management is reported to have a $7 to $10 return on investment within a year. the 20 percent of staff members requiring the greatest medical expenditures today are normally not the same 20 percent who’ll cause the greatest health expenses a year or two down the road.
Programs focusing on health enhancement and risk management. These programs focus on lifestyle behavior change, and offer a $3 to $6 return on investment within two to five years, according to a 2004 report issued by the National Business Group on Health.
It is important to note that a $3 to $6 return on an entire staff member population produces a higher sum savings than does illness management.
Good Data Drives Good Business Decisions
Based on more than 120 research studies, the National Company Group on Health announced that, within five years of program implementation, overall benefit-to-cost ratios (return on investment) of -
$3.48 in reduced health-care costs per dollar invested.
$5.82 in reduce absenteeism per dollar invested.
July 23, 2010 No Comments
What Will a Wellness Program Cost?
The Facts Speak for Themselves - Wellness Helps Reduce Costs
A 2003 investigation of one big United States business found that simply assisting staff members control their blood pressure alone can save $547 per individuals per year.
Johnson and Johnson claims to have saved $38 million in health-care costs for its workers between 1995 and 1999 by promoting healthful lifestyles.
Healthcare expenses decreased $224 per staff member per year (averaged over four years), and this rate improved over time. the company found most benefits in the third and fourth years after program initiation.
A 2004 University of Michigan study of 23,500 General Motors employees showed that nonexercising employees claimed at least $100 more per year in health-care costs than exercisers.
The study also reported that obese, sedentary employees who started exercising at least twice a week reduced their costs by an average of $500 a year.
the Washoe County School District in Nevada estimated that, in a single year, it spent $300,000 on direct costs associated with obesity and $1 million for gastric-bypass surgeries. It instituted a weight-loss program that paid employees $10 per pound lost, up to 25 pounds.
Program participants missed three fewer workdays per year, producing a cost savings of $15.60 per program dollar spent.
Staff Time
Building a successful Wellness Program requires staff time as well as money. Some larger organizations may spend 20 hours per week for three to six months preparing all the steps before launching a Wellness Program.
Corporation Costs
Monetary costs can fluctuate widely, depending on whether the company compensates all costs, the staff members pay all costs, or the costs are shared.
A 1992 study indicated that 28% of corporations spent $5 or less per staff member, and 19% spent between $6-10 per staff member.
The Wellness Council of America estimates the cost per staff member to be between $100 and $150 per year for an effective wellness program that produces a return on investment of $300 to $450. A sample expenditure for various levels of programs include -
Program Type
A minimal (largely paper) program $1 - $7
A moderate program
A medium program with a few activities $16 - $35
A fairly robust program $36 - $75
A very robust, effective program $76 - $112
July 22, 2010 No Comments
Why Invest In Corporate Wellness?
the news isn’t encouraging. As reported by Corporation Week, family health-care premiums increased 49% from 2000 to 2004.
Another increase of 12-15 percent is expected in 2005. General Motors expects to spend $5.6 billion on medical costs in 2005, or 40 percent more than it earned in profits in 2004.
More research shows that poor diet andphysical inactivity are major drivers of increases in healthcare costs for businesss. the number of obese adults has doubled since the 1970s.
the rise in obesity has a significant impact on health-care costs. on average, 2002 health-care costs for an obese individuals were $1,244 higher than for a individuals with a healthful weight.
Obesity is causing rapid increases in type 2 diabetes and contributes directly to a 65 percent increase in diabetes treatment from 1987 to 2002. Almost $1 of every $5 spent on health care in the United States is for a individuals with diabetes.
Treating worker healthcare as an investment, rather than a cost, can yield long-term dividends
at least 50 percent of your organization’s health-care costs are driven by the lifestyle related behaviors of your staff members, like smoking, poor diet, and lack of exercise.
In the past 10 years, the annual return on investment for Wellness Programs has been as much as $6 saved for every $1 spent, doubling the return on investment of earlier programs.
the average reduction in health-plan costs, sick time, disability costs, and workers’ compensation is more than 25 percent for well-designed Wellness Programs.
Fit workers are more productive workers, with fewer sick days, fewer accidents, higher morale, and lower job turnover.
July 21, 2010 No Comments
Wellness Programs Reap the Benefits of Health.
The concern for worker wellness is an increasing trend for American corporation. Why? the link between worker wellness and the bottom line is clear and consistent.
Corporations who integrate wellness in their overall goals find they experience lowered absences, better morale, lowered health risks, and lowered health-care costs.
The purpose of this guide to is to encourage and help you launch your own Wellness Program. When you already have a program, but aren’t receiving the results you expected, perhaps some of the ideas and best practices in this toolkit will help you and your staff members reap the benefits of a healthier workforce.
At least 50 percent of health-care expenditures are lifestyle-related, and thus, potentially preventable. Yet despite the $5,000 an average corporation spends on healthcare per employee each year, most corporations are spending less than 5 percent of that on medical screenings and prevention.
The most robust meta-evaluation of Wellness Program studies shows something very exciting! It shows that Wellness Programs aren’t only effective at helping to reverse the rising spiral of health-care costs, but these programs are also becoming more effective. the average cost-benefit ratio has increased from 1 - 3 for earlier programs to 1 - 6 today.
Simply put, the average reduction in health-care costs, sick leave, disability costs, and workers’ compensation is more than 25% for well designed programs.
Corporate wellness provides a long-term approach for helping keep employees well. the single most vital thing you can do for your employees is to begin a Wellness Program now.
July 20, 2010 No Comments
