Archive for April, 2009

Pay Attention to Healthy People?

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

That’s the recommendation from wellness guru Dee Edington in the following article…

Pay Attention to the Healthy People

Janice Simmons, for HealthLeaders Media, April 16, 2009

In today’s economy, it’s becoming apparent that what we consider “health” needs to be redefined, argues Dee Edington, PhD, director of the University of Michigan’s Health Management Research Center in Ann Arbor.

In quality terms, the current healthcare model needs to move away from its structure of waiting for defects—and then trying to fix those defects. In other words, the system waits for patients to get sick and then treats them. But this has created a failed healthcare strategy that is posing a major threat to business survival, says Edington, author of a new book, Zero Trends: Health as a Serious Economic Strategy.

“Companies are going out of business because we don’t pay attention to healthy people. Our whole country, as we all know, just waits for sickness,” he told a Washington audience earlier this month. “Nobody cares about health except for the individuals themselves, and they don’t even care because they think, ‘It’s not going to happen to me.’”

Edington doesn’t consider his comments a shot across the bow aimed at healthcare providers. Instead, he sees it as an idea that providers—as employers themselves—can embrace and adopt for their own employee populations. One Michigan healthcare organization, Allegiance Health System, has already taken his suggestions on keeping its employees on the healthier side.

To change the conversation about health in today’s environment, Edington proposes five areas of change:

1.     Move from health as the absence of disease to health as vitality and energy. Companies can no longer wait for their employees to become sick. Instead, they need to realize that keeping people healthy adds value on both sides: Costs related to disease are lower while productivity increases.

2.     Move from caring only for the sick to enabling people to stay healthy. A culture needs to be developed that individuals are “winners” when it comes to health. Some corporate and community cultures are starting to change, and governments have put their stamp on change by legislating smoke-free environments or mandating safety belt laws. But more is needed, Edington says. Employers can help by recognizing and rewarding employees for staying healthy. “Set the incentives for healthy choices. Reinforce every touch point, every e-mail. Every time CEOs have a chance to talk, let them talk about the healthy culture,” he says.

3.     Move from the cost of healthcare to the total value of health. Governments and organizations generally have focused on how much it costs for someone who is sick. However, the total value of someone’s health should be much more than that, he says.

4.     Move from individual participation to population engagement. Health promotion or wellness programs have gone down the wrong path, Edington says. “If you try to change a person or provide something where people can change, then where do they go?” he asks. “You can’t put a changed person back into the same environment because what happens? They go right back.” Instead, shifts need to be made that keep entire populations in mind. Whether it’s a company or a government, strategies aimed at entire populations need to be kept in mind that encourage, for instance, compliance with activities such as exercising or smoking cessation.

5.     Move from behavior change to a culture of health. All too often, a “blame the victim” mentality has emerged for those who drink too much or do not exercise enough or do not eat healthy foods. The solution was to “sentence” them to behavior change programs, which often fell short of their goals, he says. Instead, more encompassing changes need to take place across the culture through vision and commitment that encourage healthier behaviors.

 

Employee Wellness Programs Continue to Grow in Midst of Recession

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

Modern Healthcare highlighted the following in a recent article:

Despite recession, workplace wellness programs continue to grow

By Rebecca Vesely

Posted: April 15, 2009 - 4:45 pm EDT

 

Employers are continuing to add workplace wellness programs despite the ongoing recession, according to a survey by Watson Wyatt Worldwide, a consulting firm, and the National Business Group on Health.

Nearly 58% of companies surveyed offer lifestyle improvement programs, up from 43% in 2007, and 56% offer health coaches, compared with 42% two years ago, according to the survey of 489 large U.S. employers conducted in January.

Here’s a link to the article:  http://www.modernhealthcare.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090415/REG/304159975/1010&rssfeed=rss01

Employers Underestimate the Cost of Poor Employee Health

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

ELK GROVE VILLAGE, Ill., April 13 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — Poor health among workers is far costlier to U.S. employers than they realize, impacting their profitability and undercutting the nation’s overall productivity, according to a major study published this week in the Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine (JOEM).

The multi-year study of ten organizations employing more than 150,000 workers indicates that employers who focus only on medical and pharmacy costs in creating employee health strategies may misidentify the health conditions that most impact the productivity of their employees — while underestimating the impact of other factors.

One such factor, “presenteeism,” occurs when employees with health conditions are present at their jobs but are unable to perform at full capacity. The study closely examined the effects of presenteeism, concluding that impaired employee-performance typically creates a greater drain on a company’s productivity than employee absence — a finding which could come as a surprise to some employers.

The study also found that when considering medical and drug costs alone, the top five conditions driving costs are cancer (other than skin cancer), back/neck pain, coronary heart disease, chronic pain, and high cholesterol. But when health-related productivity costs are measured along with medical and pharmacy costs, the top five chronic health conditions driving these overall health costs shift significantly, to depression, obesity, arthritis, back/neck pain and anxiety.

The study suggests that many employers miss an opportunity to improve productivity and their bottom-line results by failing to recognize and prioritize these health conditions when they develop integrated employee- health strategies and related interventions.

The study, coordinated by the American College of Occupational and Environmental Medicine (ACOEM), the Integrated Benefits Institute (IBI), and Alere LLC (formerly Matria Healthcare, Inc.) is one of the largest of its kind to date. Research was conducted via the Alere Center for Health Intelligence and funding was provided by the National Pharmaceutical Council.

“The wake-up call for U.S. employers is that simply looking at the costs of specific medical conditions by adding up medical and pharmacy claims costs alone won’t give a true picture of the full impact of poor health on the much greater costs of lost productivity in the workforce,” said Ronald Loeppke, MD, MPH, executive vice president of Health and Productivity Strategy for Alere(R) and one of the study’s lead researchers. In addition to his role at Alere(R), Dr. Loeppke serves on the board of directors of both IBI and ACOEM.

“Employers need to move beyond solutions that focus only on specific medical conditions and toward the development of integrated personal health support strategies that deal with multiple health conditions and health risks by focusing on the whole person as well as the whole population,” said Thomas Parry, PhD, president of the Integrated Benefits Institute. “This is especially important if American business is to remain competitive in the midst of a dire global economy.”

Other highlights of the study:

– Health-related productivity costs are significantly greater than medical and pharmacy costs alone. On average, every $1 of medical and pharmacy costs is matched to $2.3 of health-related productivity costs — and that figure is much greater for some conditions.

– Co-morbidities — employees with multiple chronic health conditions — drive the largest effects on productivity loss. The study calls for further research to better evaluate the impacts of co-morbidities by conditions and combinations of conditions.

– The impact of poor health on productivity impacts all levels of an enterprise. Executives/managers seem to suffer high presenteeism productivity- loss related to specific health conditions along with those in non-managerial jobs.

Researchers analyzed more than 1.1 million medical and pharmacy claims during the study. The ten corporations that participated ranged from an industrial chemical manufacturer and a computer hardware manufacturer to telecommunications and technology companies.

To fully gauge health-related productivity costs, researchers measured medical and pharmacy spending along with lost-productivity costs related to absence and presenteeism. The study notes that employers have not historically assessed costs in this way, limiting themselves instead to a “siloed” approach that seeks to manage single health-cost categories, such as medical visits or pharmaceuticals, through benefit-package design.

Researchers compared pharmacy and medical claims data to employee self- reported absence, presenteeism and health information collected through the Health and Work Performance Questionnaire (HPQ), developed by Harvard University researcher Ronald Kessler, PhD, and the World Health Organization. Information collected on employer business measures was combined with this database in modeling health-related lost productivity.

The analysis employed by the research team breaks down the silos typically used when examining the cost of health care for a company. “When medical costs are viewed in a silo, or without the broader context of the full health- related costs, the full impact of a given health condition may be seriously underestimated without accurately assessing the accompanying costs of lost productivity,” Dr. Loeppke said.

“A healthy workforce is critical to an employer’s ability to compete in today’s economy,” said Dan Leonard, president of the National Pharmaceutical Council. “This landmark study can help employers understand the importance of balancing health care costs with quality of care and wellness and prevention initiatives when designing benefits. By recognizing these issues, employers can take steps toward improving employee health, productivity, and retention, as well as spend their health care dollars more effectively.”

“The transformational opportunity for employers is to look beyond healthcare benefits as a cost to be managed and rather to the benefits of good health as an investment to be leveraged. Ultimately, a healthier, more productive workforce can help drive a healthier economy for our nation,” Dr. Loeppke said.

Study authors include Ronald Loeppke, MD, MPH; Michael Taitel, PhD.; Vince Haufle, MPH; Thomas Parry, PhD.; Ronald C. Kessler, PhD.; and Kimberly Jinnett, PhD.

 

Thanks to Mark Onigman for this article.  Full website link available at http://cft8.blogspot.com/2009/04/most-employers-underestimate-full-costs.html

This Week’s Track Workout

Friday, April 10th, 2009

This week we’re preparing the group for some longer events many have upcoming (half marathon or more in many cases)…

  • 10 min warm-up
  • 4 x 5 minute intervals @ 5K pace with 3 minutes jog in between each one - Focus on making each interval slightly faster than the last
  • 8 minute drainer - 40 second sprint…20 sec jog/walk…40 sec sprint…20 sec jog/walk…repeat a total of 8 times.  Stay tight on your rest period and your intensity on the sprints.  This one will seem easy the first 3-4 intervals but on the last few you should be holding on for dear life.  Go get ‘em!
  • 10 minute warm-down

Employee Wellness News and Features

Friday, April 10th, 2009

A “kudos” to Michele Baker for her contribution…

Walk to School Program Proves Successful for Kansas School

March 31, 2009

Robert Wood Johnson Foundation

http://www.rwjf.org/childhoodobesity/digest.jsp?id=10118

 

Experts Say Health Reforms Must Also Focus on Nutrition and Exercise

April 2, 2009

Robert Wood Johnson Foundation

http://www.rwjf.org/coverage/digest.jsp?id=10230

 

Healthy Workforce Act reintroduced

April 2, 2009

AHA News

http://www.ahanews.com/ahanews_app/jsp/display.jsp?dcrpath=AHANEWS/AHANewsNowArticle/data/ann_040209_bill&domain=AHANEWS

 

State to offer employees wellness-oriented health program

April 6, 2009

Omaha World Herald

http://www.omaha.com/index.php?u_page=2798&u_sid=10604092

 

Very obese adults almost completely sedentary

April 7, 2009

Reuters

http://www.reuters.com/article/healthNews/idUSTRE53651Q20090407

 

Still Awaiting An Insurance Bailout

April 7, 2009

Washington Post

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/04/06/AR2009040602392.html

 

A HEALTHY BOTTOM LINE Employers address rising health insurance costs

April 7, 2009

Prairie Business

http://www.prairiebizmag.com/articles/index.cfm?id=9625&section=homepage

 

It’s not baby fat: Among 4-year-olds, nearly 1 in 5 is obese

April 7, 2009

CNN
http://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/04/07/obesity.preschool.children/

 

Diet change cuts diabetes risk in Latino teens

April 7, 2009

Reuters

http://www.reuters.com/article/healthNews/idUSTRE5366Z020090407

 

Desk jobs making more people obese, study finds

April 8, 2009

Reuters

http://www.reuters.com/article/healthNews/idUSTRE53744420090408

 

Obama sets up formal office for healthcare reform

April 9, 2009

Reuters

http://www.reuters.com/article/politicsNews/idUSTRE53801320090409

 

Most Recent Health and Wellness News Updates

Saturday, April 4th, 2009

Thanks to Michele Baker for this week’s updates…

Low Fruit, Vegetable Intake Is a Worldwide Problem

March 17, 2009

Health Behavior News Service

http://www.cfah.org/hbns/archives/getDocument.cfm?documentID=1861

 

‘Born in the USA’ Might Mean Higher BMI for Asian-Americans

March 24, 2009

Health Behavior News Service

http://www.cfah.org/hbns/archives/getDocument.cfm?documentID=1865

 

Groups find common ground on health care overhaul

March 27, 2009

The Associated Press

http://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation/AP/story/970885.html

 

Stealth Health For Kids

March 28, 2009

Newsweek

http://www.newsweek.com/id/191430

 

School Water Fountains to Prevent Obesity

March 30, 2009

New York Times

http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/03/30/school-water-fountains-to-prevent-obesity/

 

Democrats Agree on a Health Plan; Now Comes the Hard Part

March 31, 2009

New York Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/01/us/politics/01health.html?_r=1&ref=health

 

Playing with food can teach lesson

March 30, 2009

The Courier-Journal, Louisville

http://www.courier-journal.com/article/20090330/NEWS0105/903300369/1060

 

Food security still a problem as hunger rises: FAO

March 30, 2009

Reuters

http://www.reuters.com/article/healthNews/idUSTRE52T2R720090330

 

Most teens aren’t getting preventive health care

April 1, 2009

USA Today

http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2009-04-01-teens-preventive_N.htm

 

U.S. experts urge health reforms in schools, cities

April 2, 2009

Reuters

http://www.reuters.com/article/healthNews/idUSTRE5310RK20090402

 

 

This Week’s Track Workout

Friday, April 3rd, 2009

Here’s the plan for this week.  I won’t be able to join you due to a bad wheel, but have a great workout.  This one has notes for those who are coming off the half marathon this weekend as well…

  • 10 min warm-up
  • 6 min interval at half marathon pace with 5 min jog for recovery - Half Marathoners - do 5 minute interval with extra rest
  • 5 x (2 min and 1 min intervals with equal rest between) - Half marathoners - do every other interval and take additional rest
  • 3 min at pace faster than original 6
  • 10 minute warm-down