Employee wellness programs help companies deal with rising healthcare costs

One way corporate America is tackling the rise in healthcare costs is by offering an employee wellness program.  Many are offering incentives to employees in terms of gifts and rewards for employees who become actively engaged. The benefits are worth the investment as employers are encouraging employees to take an active role in maintaining their health.

KePRO Industry News

Many employers’ healthcare costs are soaring as a result of the high prevalence of chronic diseases. This is cutting into profit margins and making it difficult for companies to expand. In order to address the situation, many businesses are looking to employee wellness programs.

For example, a group of business leaders in Oregon and state health officials recently joined forces to form the initiative Wellness@Work, according to Oregon Business. The project provides companies with an online resource that they can use gauge their employees’ levels of wellness and consider new initiatives to improve well-being.

“We’re hoping businesses will bring together a committee of employees from all departments to make changes to their workplaces,” Dawn Robbins, the state’s worksite wellness coordinator, told the news source.

She added that despite fears over the cost of the initiatives, most businesses see a significant return on their investment in employee wellness. In fact, the Wellness Council of America estimates that most will experience a return of $3 for every $1 invested.

This could help businesses handle the dramatic rise in healthcare costs that are expected to occur this year and beyond.

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Preventive care key to slowing health costs

Dr. James Proodian

Read the latest about health care reform. Wellness and its effects on reducing chronic illness needs to be addressed if we want to start reducing the ever growing cost of health care.

The effort put into the landmark legislation on the delivery of health care has been about everything but health care. The focus has been on manipulating the process rather than fixing the problem of rising health care costs and making Americans healthier.

The answer is preventive care, which has proven to reduce costs and improve wellness with disease prevention.

Today, the United States ranks 27th in the world in health, characterized by epidemics in obesity, depression, and type 2 diabetes. The bottom line is that 78 percent of all doctor visits are for chronic conditions, such as heart disease, obesity, type 2 diabetes, hypertension and other lifestyle-caused illnesses.

These are highly preventable, but there is no layer in our health care system that is defined, credentialed and committed to treating chronic illness.

Creating this new layer of health care is what legislators should be discussing. With all the focus on the cost of health care reform, no one is talking about the cost of chronic illness which accounts for 78 percent of all health care expenditures.

This means that three out of four patients are visiting their doctor because of chronic illness. Behavioral and lifestyle health changes are the best way to lower health care costs — and, more importantly, improve the health and wellness of individuals of all ages.

While there are health care professionals who are dedicated to chronic disease prevention and wellness, it is an individual’s responsibility to find them in their community. Real health care reform would be establishing a new layer in our health care system that is defined, credentialed and committed to treating chronic illness.

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