Wellness has an ROI...
As the recession lingers,
companies continue to shed employees and cut back spending on capital
equipment. But one of the hottest areas of corporate investment these days:
paying employees bonuses and incentives to be as healthy as they can be.
About 80 percent of firms are targeting employees’ chronic health conditions, up from 51 percent the previous year, according to a survey by human resources consultant Hewitt Associates. More than 70 percent are zeroing in on cardiovascular disease and diabetes, 56 percent on asthma and about a third are attacking depression.
This article ran in the Star Telegram....
http://www.star-telegram.com/news/columnists/steve_jacob/story/1392759.html
It is a smart bet. A
recent Milken Institute report puts the chronic-disease price tag of lost
productivity at $1.1 trillion, with additional estimated treatment costs of
$277 billion. Hewitt estimates that a typical 10,000-employee company spends
$18 million to $22 million on direct medical care just for its diabetic
employees.
Employers are clearly fed
up with waiting for the federal government and insurers to get a grip on
healthcare costs and are taking things into their own hands, especially because
they are footing a majority of the bill. About 60 percent of Americans got their
health insurance through their employer in 2006.
The payback varies, and
sometimes it takes a while to recoup it. But a 2005 American Journal of Health Promotion analysis of studies
of return on investment for workplace health promotion found an average of
$5.81 per $1 invested in programs. The American Heart Association (AHA) claims
$16 savings for every $1 invested. The return includes improved employee
health, reduced medical expenses and absenteeism.
Wellness programs
typically include employee health assessments and interventions aimed at
minimizing health risk factors, such as smoking, excess weight, high blood
pressure and high cholesterol. Fitness classes, subsidized gym memberships and
tobacco cessation counseling are popular.
These efforts can take
the edge off the economic downturn’s impact on health. A March AHA survey
showed 57 percent have altered health behavior by dropping gym memberships,
eating fewer fruits and vegetables, skipping doctor appointments and forgoing
medications.
But employers get the
biggest payback when they target chronic conditions, ensuring employees are
monitored properly to avoid complications from heart disease and diabetes. An
estimated 30 percent of workers have an undiagnosed chronic condition, and
another 25 percent are considered at risk of developing one. Heart disease and
diabetes can comprise an estimated 90 percent of hospital and physician
payments for a typical company.
This is all well and
good, but companies offering to help are not feeling the love.
Employee participation in
these services is only about 15 percent, according to a PricewaterhouseCoopers
survey. However, they are significantly more likely to participate if they
receive incentives such as gift cards or insurance premium reductions.
An encumbrance
historically, the federal government is finally catching on that the private
sector is taking the initiative to attack health costs and that it needs to get
out of the way. Federal law limits the amount of financial incentives companies
can give employees for losing weight or kicking a smoking habit. It also treats
subsidized gym memberships as taxable income.
Health reformers want to
remove the handcuffs. One of President Barack Obama’s eight goals for health
legislation is investment in wellness and prevention. There is a flurry of
legislation from both sides of the aisle. Democratic Sens. Tom Harkin of
State Sen. Jane Nelson,
R-Flower Mound, has expressed a desire to give tax credits for corporate
wellness efforts but has not been able to gain any legislative traction.
But critics have emerged
because some companies are also making employees financially responsible for
unhealthy behavior. They may charge more for health insurance to those who fail
to take corrective action after they have been counseled about their condition
and advised of a course of action. For example, employees who have high
cholesterol ethically cannot be penalized for the condition because it may be
genetically influenced. But they can be penalized for not taking cholesterol-lowering
medicine or attending a pertinent class.
Companies — and many of
their healthy fellow employees — argue that workers who are unhealthy by their
own actions are harming everyone by driving up the firms’ cost of health
insurance. For that, they say, there should be a price.
Worker-rights groups and
unions argue employees should be judged on job performance, not health habits,
and companies have no right to intrude on private lives. Such corporate
paternalism has a long history. Nearly a century ago, Ford Motor Co.
investigators visited workers’ homes to check on their sex lives and drinking
habits.
The National Institutes
of Health (NIH) has established guidelines to ensure workplace wellness
programs are being ethically administered. The NIH warns employers not to
create standards that are unnecessarily difficult to achieve or potentially
harmful. And the financial penalties should be designed to provide an incentive
to change behavior instead of attempting to recoup costs.
The workplace is an ideal
venue for prevention and wellness. Motivated companies can, in turn, motivate
employees, and everyone wins. Congress needs to deliver on this pillar of
health reform and do its part to allow it to continue to flourish.