Corporate Wellness Program
Random header image... Refresh for more!

Wellness Programs : Obesity Management Programs - Key Measures.

Thinking about an obesity-related disease management (DM) program for your business? Here’s what you need to know.

In order to be effective, the health promotion program must meet participants’ individual medical and psychological needs, not to mention your own organization’s need to control long-term health costs.

Exactly how wide-reaching should the program be? After all, it does not make sense to pay for services your workers don’t want or can’t use.

Mary Beth Chalk of Resources for Living suggests that obesity programs could be broken down into four tiers of staff member need, from which your organization’s Return On Investment (ROI) can also be measured.

Tier 1 -  Education

Tier I personnel struggle with weight management problems but don’t need a health Coach.  Instead, they might benefit from a self-directed program that provides weight-management related materials online, targeted mailing, and/or access to nurse call line.

Precisely how to measure ROI -  utilization. Do staff members click on the Web site? Do they return to the site regularly? Do people  use the nurse line? Your wellness program vendor should provide you detailed use stats.

Tier 2 -  Clinical supervision

If the worker has been diagnosed as obese - a Body Mass Index  score over 30 is obese, over 35 is clinically obese - he or she would do better working with a wellness coach in a clinically supervised wellness program.

Three keys to getting maximum results -

1. Periodically have participants rate their relationship with their health Coaches. Not everyone clicks, so a change could  be in order.

2. Coordinate your disease management care with your employee assistance program (EAP)services. Reason -  Inability to control weight is often closely tied with psychological health issues - and one can negatively affect the other.

The more closely your EAP and obesity program managers work together, the higher the chance for success.

3. Beware of the fade-out effect. A lot of personnel in weight-loss programs get off to a excellent start and then fall back into old habits. People  should re-commit to the program after three sessions, four months and nine months.

To measure ROI, look at utlization, goal achievement and reduced presenteeism. of course, presenteeism is notoriously challenging to measure with reliable dollar figures. So how can you overcome that problem?

• Start with employees’ salaries. Let’s suppose one participant earns $40,000 a year.

• Ask workforce to self-report how energetic and productive they feel on the job, on a percentage scale. Then have supervisors estimate the employee’s productivity and split the difference. for this example, let’s assume it averaged to 50 percent.

• Collect scores again six months and one year into the program and then multiply the difference by salary.  The result is your estimated productivity Return On Investment (ROI).

In the example above, when the employee earning $40,000 improves from 50 percent to 75 percent after one year, the productivity related ROI is $10,000.  

Tier 3 -  Medical management

At this level, the obese employee needs a higher level of care than a health coach can offer.  The employee has chronic health conditions related to obesity - such as diabetes, high blood pressure, and/or sleep apnea - and needs a physician case manager.

Namely, the employee needs to set up regular visits with the physician and develop a treatment plan.

To measure Return On Investment (ROI), start with the lower-tier criteria, then track quarterly and year differences in FMLA or compensated absences, and prescription drug costs. Then compare it to the per-participant cost of the obesity program.

Tier 4 -  Morbid obesity

At this level, the employee has been diagnosed as morbidly obese - Body Mass Index over 40 - and is considered a potential candidate for gastric bypass surgery.

Return On Investment (ROI) is measured through ongoing health claims as well as the previous criteria.

0 comments

There are no comments yet...

Kick things off by filling out the form below.

Leave a Comment