Corporate Wellness Programs in a Depressed Economy

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Posted by Corporate Wellness | Posted in Corporate Wellness | Posted on 06-11-2008

Corporate Wellness Programs and Health Care Costs

Corporate Wellness Programs are more important now than ever. According to an article in the Wall Street Journal, with the troubles in the economy it seems that the costs of corporation provided health care keep continuing to grow and it doesn’t seem like it is going to change. The article states that during the year 2008, U.S. organizations can expect to see an increase of 10% in health care costs.

This increase in health care costs is causing some small organizations to reduce their employee health benefits or get rid of them altogether.

Corporate Wellness Programs for Healthier Lifestyles

Corporate Wellness Programs do offer an option for small organizations. The corporations can offer discounted co-pays and deductibles to those workers that fully participate in the provided Corporate Wellness Program. Full participation means getting health screens, receiving a health risk assessment, and then working with their wellness coordinator to work towards a healthier lifestyle.

The healthier the workers, the reduce the overall health care costs for the corporation. Just one lengthy hospital stay can almost deplete a small business’ health care budget.

Corporate Wellness Programs and Your Bottom Line

Corporate Wellness Programs offer many advantages to a corporation’s bottom-line. Corporate Wellness Program Statistics from Prudential Insurance show a benefit expense of $312 per individual enrolled in a Corporate Wellness Program compared to an expense of $574 per employee that wasn’t enrolled. Coors Brewing Company showed a positive side-effect of participant absenteeism dropping by 18%, thus greater production and less health care costs overall.

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Corporate Wellness Programs Bring a Healthier Bottom-lines

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Posted by Corporate Wellness | Posted in Corporate Wellness | Posted on 05-11-2008

Corporate Wellness Programs are an intelligient investment, at least according to Lincoln industries in Nebraska. CNN reported on this 565 employee company their committed investment in their employee’s wellness.

Corporate Wellness Programs are part of company Culture

The Corporate Wellness Programs, according the story, has been in place for 16 years at Lincoln, and it doesn’t seem to be going anywhere. The company has three full-time workers dedicated to the Corporate Wellness Program and the wellness of the workers, who receive onsite massages and a round of instructor-led stretching before they start their shifts.

Corporate Wellness Programs Assessed

According to CNN, one of the stipulations of the Corporate Wellness Program, which workers are not required to participate in, is that they receive quarterly checkups where assessments are completed on their weight, amount of body fat and flexibility. Based on these health assessments, the workers are then ranked from platinum all the way down to “non-medal”. To become platinum level, where you receive a company-paid climbing trip, you must achieve certain physical fitness levels and be a non-smoker. Smoking cessation classes are part of the Corporate Wellness Program.

Corporate Wellness Programs Bring a Big Savings

The Corporate Wellness Program has been a smart investment for Lincoln Industries. By having healthier workers, they have seen an average of $2 million in savings in health care costs per year. The savings don’t stop there, since instituting a Corporate Wellness Program, workers’ compensation claims have gone from $500,000 per year down to less than $10,000 per year.

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Benefits of Corporate Wellness Programs

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Posted by Corporate Wellness | Posted in Corporate Wellness | Posted on 04-11-2008

Corporate Wellness Programs Are Becoming Increasingly Popular

Corporate Wellness Programs are Are Becoming Increasingly popular outside the workplace, showing the ever-increasing importance of disease prevention and health risk management. Private insurance businesses, as well as state Medicaid and Medicare offices are working on ways to enhance the health of the people they insure in hopes to save money in the long run. They are finding that mini-Corporate Corporate Wellness Programs are definitely the way to go.

Corporate Wellness Programs Aid in Early Intervention

According to an article that recently appeared in The Indianapolis Star, organizations, insurers and government agencies are turning to “early intervention to change the behavior of those struggling with common but dangerous health conditions, such as asthma, diabetes, heart failure and coronary heart disease.”

The strategies that they incorporated to enhance their beneficiaries’ wellness postcard reminders for different lab tests or check-ups; and possibly even phone calls from nurses to work with the patients to make sure that they are taking their medicines properly and following the lifestyle changes that were suggested by their health care provider.

Corporate Wellness Programs Offer Quality Benefits

There are more positive aspects to a Corporate Wellness Program than just the cost savings that an corporation or a state agency will see; there is the benefit to the actually patient. The patient is going to get the motivation and the incentive to get better or to manage their health by having to answer to someone, whether that someone is a full-time wellness employee at their company or a nurse affiliated with their insurance company.

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Corporate Wellness Programs: The Bottom-Line Enhancer

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Posted by Corporate Wellness | Posted in Corporate Wellness | Posted on 03-11-2008

Corporate Wellness Programs are proven to improve productivity and lower health care costs. For a business, that makes a difference in the bottom-line. Today, more than 81 percent of America’s businesses with 50 or more employees have some form of Corporate Wellness Program with the most popular being exercise, tobaccos cessation classes, back care programs, and stress management. Most companies offer Corporate Wellness Programs simply because they think the benefit is worth the cost. Yet business leaders continue to ask themselves how to control huge annual increases in medical insurance premiums and health care costs.

For many organizations, medical costs can consume half of corporate profits or more. Some employer’s look to cost sharing, cost shifting, managed care plans, risk rating, and cash-based rebates or incentives and rewards. But these methods merely shift costs. Only Corporate Wellness Programs stand out as the long-term answer for keeping employees well in the first place.

Corporate Wellness Programs are an example of health care reform that works. Results from America’s finest organizations, summarized here, are reason enough to consider providing Corporate Wellness Programs. This investment in your most important asset – your employees – can have a positive impact on your bottom-line.

Corporate Wellness Program Statistics:

Providence Everett Medical Center, a member of the WELCOA, in Everett, Washington, saved an estimated 3 million or a cost-benefit ratio of 1 to 3.8 over 9 years of an outcomes-based Corporate Wellness Program. By providing financial incentives and rewards ($250 – $325) to employees who meet specific organizational and employee health initiatives the Corporate Wellness Program continues to meet cost containment expectations in the area of health care use, sick time, injuries, while improving health habits and self-care practices.

During the first 4 years of the Corporate Wellness Program there was a 28 percent average reduction in health care utilization compared to nine other Providence hospitals that were used as a control group.

Du Pont saw that each dollar invested in their Corporate Wellness Program saved $1.42 over two years in lower absenteeism costs at Du Pont Co. (Well workplace Gold in Delaware). Absences from illness unrelated to the job among 45,000 blue-collar staff members dropped 14 percent at 41 industrial sites where the Corporate Wellness Program was provided, compared with a 5.8 percent decline at 19 sites where it was not.

The Travelers Corporation claims a $3.40 return for every dollar invested Corporate Wellness Programs, yielding total corporate savings of $146 million in benefits costs. Sick leave was reduced 19 percent during the four-year study. In addition to improving the overall health of 36,000 employees and retirees by reducing poor health habits and increasing good ones, The Travelers realized cost savings by decreasing the number of unnecessary visits to a doctor and emergency rooms. In a similar but smaller study, members of a Travelers fitness center Corporate Wellness Program were absent from work significantly fewer days than non-members.

The Corporate Wellness Program at Reynolds Electrical & Engineering Company, based in Las Vegas, cost $76.24 per employee during the two years it has been in operation. Over half of the 1,600 employees took part in the Corporate Wellness Program. Participants significantly lowered cholesterol levels, blood pressure, and weight and experienced 21 percent lower lifestyle-related claim costs than non-participant. Resulting savings: $127.89 per participant in the Corporate Wellness Program with a benefit to cost ratio of 1.68 to 1.

Superior Coffee and Foods, a Bensenville, Illinois-based subsidiary of Sara Lee Corporation, attributes impressive results to the success of the organization’s complete Corporate Wellness Program. Superior showed 22 percent fewer admissions to a hospital, 29 percent shorter hospital stays, and 42 percent lower expenses per admission when comparing costs for this division’s 1,200 employees with costs for other divisions. Long-term disability costs were down by 40 percent.

With medical costs per employee at $6,000, nearly twice the national average, Union Pacific Railroad introduced their Corporate Wellness Program to its 28,000 employees, mostly union and blue collar, in 19 Western and Southern states. Beginning with a modest medical self-care initiative at an annual cost of $50 per person, the Corporate Wellness Program achieved a net savings of $1.26 million. In addition, a voluntary Corporate Wellness Program to help employees reduce health risks projected a cost-benefit ratio of 1 to 1.57 after one year. Employees in a treatment group reduceed their risk of high blood pressure (45 percent) and high cholesterol (34 percent); others moved out of the at-risk range for weight problems (30 percent); and 21 percent stopped using tobacco.

Average medical costs of high-risk Steelcase employees- those whose lifestyles include two to four health risks such as smoking, little exercise, overweight- are 75 percent higher than those of low-risk employees. But high-risk employees at this Grand Rapids, Michigan-furniture manufacturing organization who improved their health habits through the company’s Corporate Wellness Program and became low risk cut their average medical claims in half thus lowering their medical insurance costs by an average of $618 per year. If all high-risk employees (20 percent of the total employee population) in one location changed their lifestyles to become low risk, the projected savings could total $20 million over three years.

Employees at Berk-Tec, a small manufacturing organization in Lancaster County Pennsylvania, learned self-care techniques and reduceed their organization’s health care costs in one year. By using a self-care guide, the 938 employees and their family members made smart medical decisions and saved $21.67 per employee and dependent a nearly 18 percent reduction in costs. By combining reductions in doctor visits and emergency room use, the organization saved $39.06 per employee a 24.3 percent decrease in costs over the previous year.

A medical claims-based study of 72,000 people insured through 285 Wisconsin school districts found a lower demand for medical services among those with access to Corporate Wellness Programs and self-care programs. Reductions in medical services results in savings for the Wisconsin Education Insurance Group of as much as $4.75 for each $1 spent, higher savings were found in the group receiving access to a 24-hour phone-based nurse advice line, a self-care reference book, and health education materials.

CIGNA’s Healthy Babies prenatal Corporate Wellness Program delivered an average savings of $5,000 per birth by providing expectant mothers with educational materials and rewarding early and regular prenatal care. And 80 percent of participants had normal births without complications compared with 50 percent for non-participant.

With savings estimated to be as high as $8 million, the California Public Employees’ Retirement System sent its 55,000 retirees a health rist assessment followed, in some cases, with individualized reports and letters and self-care materials to encourage change and help reduce health risks among retirees and at the same time reduce the health care claim costs. In another study, Bank of America retirees in California who chose the full Corporate Wellness Program and demand reduction program showed a decrease in total direct and indirect costs of 11 percent compared with an increase of 6.3 percent for those who completed only a simple health questionnaire.

With lower health care claims, medical costs decreased 16 percent for workers in the City of Mesa (Arizona) who took part in the complete Corporate Wellness Program. The city realized a return of $3.60 for every dollar invested in the wellnss program for the city workers.

To prevent back injuries among its workers, a county in California targeted white- and blue-collar staff members, provided classes and fitness training. As a result, there was a significant increase in employee morale, reduced worker’s comp claims, medical costs and sick days related to back injuries producing a net cost-benefit ratio of 1 to 1.79.

Corporate Wellness Programs: Results

Corporate Wellness Programs offer Long-Term Results

Corporate Wellness Programs, according to an article in Crain’s Detroit Business, come in two varieties: Corporate Wellness Programs or Medical Insurance products that aim to reduce costs if healthy habits are followed. Both options are a good choice, but only one will really offer long-term medical benefits for your workers and reduce costs over the years.

Corporate Wellness Programs offer Assistance

Insurance-based products offer workers the opportunity, according to the article by Jay Green, to save money on their premiums if they follow certain steps, including performing an internet-based health assessment, visiting their medical provider, and agree to adopt a healthy lifestyle. These plans usually involve one coach call to the employee during the first 90 days. We wonder if these brief wellness encounters will actually change a individual’s lifestyle.

It is the overall change in a individual’s lifestyle, as well as disease prevention that will lead to reduce medical cots in the future.

Corporate Wellness Programs offer convenient health risk assessments and testing for things like diabetes, cholesterol and blood pressure. As the article states, these have initial start-up costs, but the savings accrue over time and workers are more likely to stay active in an workplace employee Health Promotion Program.

Corporate Wellness Programs Get Results

Finally, the article states that businesses with an effective Corporate Wellness Program can expect to see “500 percent reduce absenteeism, 400 percent fewer disability claims, and 350 percent reduce health care costs.” These are numbers that are very hard to argue with.

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Corporate Wellness Program Tends

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Posted by Corporate Wellness | Posted in Corporate Wellness | Posted on 01-11-2008

Companies are no longer able to trim extra savings out of their medical insurance programs, and most organizations have been cost shifting, asking employees to cover more of their health care costs. Health insurance costs continue to climb (10 percent or more per year) at 2-3 times the general inflation rate. With nowhere else to turn, companies are – more than ever – looking to get employees engaged in Corporate Wellness Programs as a means of slowing health care costs and improving productivity.

For example, last year 53 percent of large companies provided health risk assessments (HRAs) for their staff, up from 35 percent just two years earlier, according to a Mercer survey. Change is being driven by cost, but Corporate Wellness Programs a win-win solution for both companies and employees.

Here are other Corporate Wellness Program trends organizations are implementing:

More organizations are integrating Corporate Wellness Programs into their benefits plans. If they want the best plans or the lowest personal costs, they need to participate in the Corporate Wellness Program and meeting minimum objectives.

More organizations are providing workplace weight loss programs as part of the Corporate Wellness Program, especially after Duke University’s new research showing the high cost of overweight employees and increased cost for worker’s compensation for sedentary and overweight employees.

Companies are providing more Corporate Wellness Programs designed to assist employees with chronic health conditions: health coaches, nurse advice lines, telephone counseling, and self-study guides

Companies are providing more online Corporate Wellness Program interventions and health information resources

More organizations are providing regular workplace employee health screenings including cholesterol, glucose, A1c, blood pressure, weigh-ins, and other checks as a component of their Corporate Wellness Program. Some Corporate Wellness Programs even include bone-density checks and skin cancer screenings.

Many organizations are providing fitness programs, either in the community or workplace, as a component of their Corporate Wellness Program.

Corporations are providing more prizes, rewards, and incentives getting engaged in Corporate Wellness Program activities

Some organizations are adding emphasis to maintaining health. It’s one thing to lose weight or stop tobacco; it’s another to maintain these changes. Helping employees stay engaged and maintain their health changes is important for long-term success.

Companies are putting more emphasis on keeping healthy people healthy rather than just working primarily with high-risk individuals. Research shows this approach results in a greater Corporate Wellness Program ROI.

Wellness organizations are providing great resources for corporations’ employees over the Internet – online wellness centers, monthly health and wellness newsetters, wellness challenges, online points tracking systems, virtual fitness programs, online wellness coaching or interventions, interactive health calculators, healthy recipes, even downloadable health tips for your iPod.

Companies who are becoming more proactive are making a big impact on their future health care expenses and productivity. Ohio State University announced that they expect to save $30 million dollars with their complete Corporate Wellness Program over the next 5 years!

Corporate Wellness Programs and prevention are sound ideas whose time has come. Health promotion is more fun and less expensive than treating disease.

References: TIME in partnership with CNN, “Businesses Help Workers Lose Weight.” Website accessed July 2007.

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