Jeppesen and Dent made their comments at the SHRM Annual Conference and Exhibition held recently in Las Vegas, Nevada. Jeppesen, who is SPHR certified, serves as Senior VP, Human Resources of Larry H. Miller Group of Companies; Dent is a senior consultant for ACAP Health in Dallas, Texas.
Has traditional wellness failed? Jeppesen notes that 71% of employers offering wellness initiatives say their programs are not very effective at lowering costs.
Why? Part of the problem is participation. Typically, only small percentages participate fully.
Then there's the healthcare system itself. Jeppesen says that the bottom line with the healthcare system is this: employers benefit from healthy people, but the healthcare system benefits from sick people. The current trend is treating people who are sick, rather than focusing on preventative care. The result is that more than 95% of the nation's health expenditures are for the diagnosis and treatment of diseases.
Furthermore, more than 70% of those costs are attributed to preventable illness. Certain lifestyle challenges make it hard to reduce these costs:
Although some wellness programs may be working, says Jeppesen, the facts are that:
So what's an employer to do? Is it better to abandon wellness programs altogether? Jeppesen prevents a positive alternative that can make a big difference.
In building a wellness program for the Larry H. Miller Group of Companies, Jeppesen says she wanted a program that would:
Dent says the company chose to align with ACAP Health, a healthcare consulting firm that helps to engage major healthcare stakeholders including employers, insurers, medical providers, pharmaceutical companies and others to bring new & innovative solutions that deliver measurable results.
The company was founded on the belief that slowing the "production" of disease is the only sustainable way to flatten the trajectory of healthcare trends.
Corporate wellness programs show great ROI. And they are win-win—employees feel better and are more productive, and employers reap the benefits. Even small improvements make a difference. Download Your Free Wellness Report and test drive our Workplace Wellness Guidebook at no cost! Hurry, offer ends August 5!
In looking at the realm of healthcare costs, Dent says that it's important to note that in a given year, only 4 % of claimants submit claims for more than $10,000; however, claims for more than $10,000 account for 60 percent of expenditures.
The challenge is to get the 4% who spend most of the money, healthier, and keep the vast majority who haven't made expensive claims from becoming ones who do.
The Larry H. Miller Group of Companies chose metabolic syndrome as the target for their efforts. Employees with the syndrome have three or more of a list of conditions that collectively may lead to heart disease, diabetes, or other problems.
One source lists the following as having increased risk associated with metabolic syndrome:
Alzheimer's
Depression
Cataracts
Esophagus Cancer
Sleep Apnea
Retinopathy
*** Cancer
Stroke
Heart Attack
Cardiovascular Disease
Gall Bladder Disease
Congestive Heart Failure
Nonalcoholic Fatty Hypertension
Liver Disease
Pancreatitis
Pulmonary Disease
Pancreas Cancer
Colorectal Cancer
Diabetes
Kidney Disease/Cancer
Erectile Dysfunction
Ovarian Cancer
Gynecological Abnormalities
Urinary Tract Cancer
Psoriasis
Endometrial Cancer
Arthritis
Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma
Gout
Leukemia
Typical risk levels for metabolic syndrome factors: (different sources define these factors somewhat differently).
Man's Risk Factors
Women's Risk Factors
HDL cholesterol
<40
<50
Triglycerides
≥150
Waist circumference (Not pants size)
≥40 inches
≥35 inches
Blood pressure
≥130/85
Fasting glucose
≥100
Wellness—NO downside! Impressive ROI, so management is happy. Better health, so employees are happy. And that means HR is happy! Download your Free Special Report, Beyond the Hype: Make Wellness Work for Your Workplace now. Offer ends August 5!
Measurable Factors
One of the key factors for Jeppesen was to base the program on measurable factors. Some results that have been observed:
Reductions in the incidence of specific metabolic syndrome factors:
19%
Elevated triglicerides
41%
Reduced HDL ("Good cholesterol")
11%
Elevated blood pressure
39%
Elevated Fasting glucose
29%
Percents of participants who showed improvement:
77%
66%
Reduced HJDL ("Good cholesterol")
48%
71%
55%
Impact of diabetic risk
up 14%
Number with prediabetic gluscose (110-125)
dropped 18%
Number with diabetic risk glucose (>125)
dropped 30%
The program also showed similar improvements in weight, body mass index, and other measures.
In tomorrow's Advisor, how the program works, what it costs, and what it's saved, plus an introduction to the "Wellness Bible."
If you have comments about this tip and want to post them on this page to share your thoughts with other HR Daily Advisor readers, simply enter your comments below. NOTE: Your name will appear on any comments posted.