Where to Start with Corporate Wellness Plans

Ten Steps Toward Strategic Corporate Wellness Plans

The Employer Health and Wellness Program management world is evolving rapidly. Each month, there are new research findings that support the premise that Corporate Wellness Plans and disease management have a long-term impact on medical costs. Many large employers that started Corporate Wellness Plans three to five years ago are showing savings in health, disability, and workers compensation costs. Small to mid-size employers are watching all this and wondering where to start with wellness.

Getting upper management support and budget approval is one of the challenges at the beginning of a Corporate Wellness Program. This is the case because Corporate Wellness Plans can be expensive, averaging $150-300 per staff member per year in large employers. The majority of of the savings are not realized for a number of years. This long-term investing is hard for employers on the move.

The key to success for Corporate Wellness Plans is to take a strategic approach. Here are ten steps to consider when starting a Corporate Wellness Program.

1. Start with upper management. Without upper management support, a health promotion strategy can fall flat. Start with the health of your executive team and discover your wellness champions at the top of the corporation.
2. Assess the problem. Look at your medical claims and analyze the trends. Which conditions are driving your medical, disability, and workers’ compensation claims and which are modifiable? What’s worked and what hasn’t thus far? What is the long-term impact of doing nothing?
3. Hold an initial wellness meeting. Invite your primary stakeholders both inside and outside the corporation. Ask your broker to facilitate the meeting and invite primary health vendors including health, disability, Employee Assistance Program (EAP), fitness, and occupational nursing. Review claims and utilization data and identify primary areas of concern. Look at current offerings and see how they can be tailored to the needs of the population.
4. Consider both healthy and unhealthy workers. Since 85% of claims are usually attributed to 15% of claimants, it is critical to reach those with the most costly conditions while also reaching employees who are at risk for developing preventable diseases in the future. Voluntary Corporate Wellness Plans such as lunch and learns wellness seminars miss many of the employees who need them most. Consider programs that are population-wide or target intact workgroups. Wellness incentives help but do not motivate everyone.
5. Set short-term goals for the Corporate Wellness Programs. Set some realistic short-term goals based on your primary areas of concern. Are there any plan design changes that could have an immediate impact on spending? Are there some programmatic actions that could have immediate results?
6. Find out what workers are thinking. Hold some focus groups to determine where employees are with wellness. What’s working? What isn’t? How much interest do employees have in the Corporate Wellness Programs? What obstacles and barriers are workers experiencing when they try to change behavior?
7. Make sure you have a high-impact Employee Assistance Program (EAP). Your first wellness dollars should go into upgrading your Employee Assistance Program (EAP). A highly utilized Employee Assistance Program (EAP) can provide a foundation for all of your future wellness activities. A good Employee Assistance Program (EAP) is a trusted link to the hearts and minds of workers. At no additional cost, the Employee Assistance Program (EAP) can provide needed follow-up coaching and personal attention for workers who are working on modifiable health behaviors or involved in disease management programs. Nutritionists, fitness, pregnancy, and stress management specialists are all part of a high-value Employee Assistance Program (EAP).
8. Set three to five year goals for medical savings and measure them. Get help from your broker and insurance carrier help you on long-term goals for your health, disability, and workers compensation plans. Establish program metrics that will help you to measure ROI. Go beyond participation rates, completion rates and program satisfaction. Measure changes in readiness, changes in behavior, and changes in risk factors. Establish rigorous methods to measure medical savings over the long term.
9. Set goals for organizational health. Consider the more intangible benefits of a Corporate Health and Wellness Program and quantify them whenever possible. Include staff member turnover rates, cost of new hires, staff member morale, benefit satisfaction data, and employer of choice issues in setting goals. Establish ways to measure success in these areas.
10. Add specifics to your short and long-term plan. Include a Employer Health and Wellness Program strategy, a communication strategy, and a Employer Health and Wellness Program incentive strategy that will fit with your business culture. Focus on integration of related components along a health continuum with communications that are focused, simple, and human. Establish a budget that includes primary components such as consumer education, health promotion, Health Risk Assessments, and regular biometric screens.

This entry was posted on Tuesday, January 27th, 2009 at 1:51 am and is filed under health promotion and wellness. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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