1. TOOL: A Workplace Wellness Checklist
A list of questions to ask yourself about the effectiveness of your wellness program. It includes measuring how comprehensively you evaluate the program; looking at how much support you get from the CEO; and how well you inform your workforce about the program.
3. Ask an Expert About Health Care Benefits
The Segal Co. answers your non-legal questions about employee health care benefits. (Please note that this forum is dedicated to workforce-management professionals only, and not for employees.)
Being Healthy May Be its Own Reward, But a Little Cash Can Also Help Keep Workers Fit
Facing escalating medical costs, firms use incentives to target employees who normally do not participate in wellness programs: the ones who need them most.
By Jessica Marquez Comments 0 | Recommend 0
wo years ago Sprint found itself at a loss about what to do to stem rising health
care costs. After aggressively trying to control the expenses through cost-sharing
and changes in its benefits, the company, which has 59,000 employees, had thought it
was ahead of the curve: In the previous two years, Sprint had managed to avoid $90
million in health care increases. But before there was time to celebrate, Sprint’s
benefits team discovered that the company was still facing a $45 million to $50
million annual increase in health care costs if it didn’t do more.
"If we did nothing, it would have meant that our salespeople
were going to have to come up with $500 million more in revenue," benefits manager
Collier Case says. "That was significantly higher than the 12 percent growth rate for
our industry." Case knew that the only way to address the rising costs was to go to
the root of the problem and get employees to adopt healthier lifestyles. It would
mean taking more drastic action than just having fitness centers on company grounds,
which Sprint already did. Case realized that only people who already were
health-conscious would go to the gym. The trick would be to encourage other groups of
employees to be healthier.
Case and his team went to work on a wellness program, devising
one in which employees would take health risk assessments, either online or on paper,
and would receive follow-up calls discussing any conditions or potential risks found.
To increase participation, Sprint gave every employee $45 to take the assessment.
Additionally, the company raffled off 25 $500 American Express gift cards to
employees and dependents who took the assessment.
Sprint is one of a growing number of companies that are
realizing that simply offering wellness programs is not enough to change employee
behavior. As more CFOs and CEOs put pressure on benefits managers to reduce health
care expenses, wellness programs are evolving from a nice employee perk to a tool
that employers use to pare costs, says Jack London, executive director of patient
advocacy at Apex Management Group, a health care consulting firm based in Las Vegas
and Princeton, New Jersey.
The problem with merely offering wellness programs is that the
employees who typically participate are those who are already healthy, says Bruce
Kelley, a senior consultant at Watson Wyatt Worldwide. Employees who are obese or who
smoke often do not want to get a health risk assessment only to be told that they
have to change their lifestyles. But these are the very employees that companies most
want to reach. They are key to reducing the company’s health care costs. And that’s
where the incentives come in, Kelley says.
By offering incentives, employers hope that more of the
smokers, the overweight and the chronically ill employees will participate in their
wellness programs. "These programs have completely changed in nature," Kelley says.
"They now are more focused on targeting the higher-risk population and bringing
effective solutions to those groups."
Delta last year began raffling off gift certificates and
full-year paid health premiums to employees who signed up for an online health risk
assessment. The effort came after the Atlanta-based airline realized that a small
number of employees were driving the majority of the company’s health care costs,
says Lynn Zonakis, director of health strategy and resources at Delta.
"We saw that one-tenth of a percent of participants were
responsible for 10 percent of our health care costs and that 1.4 percent was
responsible for nearly 33 percent of our cost," she says. By offering incentives for
its wellness program, Delta hopes to get that small group of high-risk employees into
its program as the first step in living healthier lives.
Creating incentives While Sprint saw 40 percent of employees sign up for a health
assessment, it wants to do more to reward long-term behavioral changes, Case says.
Sprint is considering offering incentives to employees who take action to address
unhealthy behavior. For example, the company might give cash to employees who
participate in an exercise program. Sprint hopes to save $2 in health care costs for
every $1 spent on wellness by 2007.
Zonakis agrees that providing cash to employees for taking
health risk assessments won’t change behavior in the long term.
"Just paying $100 for a health risk assessment doesn’t take it
to the next step," she says. The airline last year had its first raffle, awarding 50
$50 gift certificates and four full-year paid health premiums. In response, 6,384 of
its 52,000 employees participated.
Rather than just entering everyone who had a health risk
assessment, only those participants who agreed to an analysis of the results and
follow-up could participate in the raffle. Any participant whose results indicated
that there was even a moderate risk of a health problem would be contacted by a nurse
to discuss how they could improve their health, Zonakis says.
"The nice thing about cash
incentives versus a discount is that when you do an exercise program and get
cash, there is an immediate reward. That is behaviorally more motivating." --Craig Weber, director of
well-being services and
clinical care initiatives at IBM
The program cost $18,509, well below what it would have cost if
the company gave $100 to each person who took a health risk assessment, she says. "By
only offering incentives to those participants that allow their results to be
analyzed, we feel the program is more meaningful," she says.
Delta’s health care costs are currently $5,208 per employee
annually. The airline’s goal is to keep its cost increases below 5 percent per year.
If Delta can keep health care costs flat this year, as it did last year, it might
begin offering reductions in premiums to employees who sign up for the assessment,
Zonakis says. She says that the company’s wellness program has helped keep health
care costs down, but it’s too early to say by how much.
Craig Weber, director of well-being services and clinical care
initiatives in the Americas for IBM, says his company has decided against offering
premium discounts because cash can often be a more effective motivator. IBM, which
has had wellness incentives since 2003, started out offering prizes such as
pedometers, books and towels to participants in its various fitness challenges.
But last year, the company decided to change its strategy and
began offering a $150 cash rebate to employees who participated in one of the
company’s physical activity programs. Participation rates jumped from about 10,000
employees to 100,000, Weber says. "The nice thing about cash incentives versus a
discount is that when you do an exercise program and get cash, there is an immediate
reward," he says. "That is behaviorally more motivating."
Dell, which launched its wellness program in the fall, tied a
cash incentive to plan participants’ medical expenses. Any employee or dependent who
takes a health risk assessment can earn $50, which goes into a health reimbursement
account. These accounts are set up by employers to reimburse employees for qualified
medical expenses.
Employees are invited into a follow-up program to address any
risks or potential risks identified in the assessment. Employees who participate in
those programs can earn up to $200 a year for their health reimbursement accounts.
"We chose to offer incentives through the health reimbursement
account instead of just giving them cash because we wanted to tie in the cost of
healthy behavior to employees," says Tre McCallister, manager of health and welfare
programs at Dell. "Also, it was much easier from an administrative point of view."
The stick approach Most managers would rather reward good behavior than punish
bad behavior, but with health care costs so high, some companies have taken a harsher
stance. Most notable is Weyco, an Okemos, Michigan-based health plan administrator
with 200 employees. It made headlines last year when it announced that it would fire
workers who were smokers. CEO Howard Weyers defends the company’s stance on smoking,
noting that Weyco started out offering incentives but did not get the results it
wanted. Also, Weyco gave employees months of notice before it began implementing the
program, Weyers says.
Eight years ago, long before wellness programs were
fashionable, Weyco began offering a plan in which employees could earn cash for
taking steps toward good health. An employee who took a health risk assessment would
get $45 per month toward a health club membership. The program, which is still in
effect, offers $105 per month for various healthy behaviors, including not smoking.
But in 2003, Weyers decided that the company needed to do more
to stop unhealthy behavior, particularly smoking. When he learned that there was no
Michigan statute preventing an employer from banning employees’ use of tobacco, he
implemented a new program: Prospective employees would have to be tested for smoking
before they were hired.
A few months later, the company banned the use of tobacco on
company property. Finally, starting this year, Weyco implemented a policy requiring
all employees to be tested for smoking. If they tested positive, they would lose
their jobs. Four people refused to take the test and left the company.
Weyers says that if he is going to pay for his employees’
health care, he should have the right not to hire smokers. Weyco pays $330 per
participant in monthly health care costs, up from $300 a few years ago. "The fact is
the incentives weren’t working," he says. "Anybody who emphasizes health in the
workplace is going to get push-back, I don’t care who it is. Some people say I used a
baseball bat, but I say I used a fly swatter."
For now, most companies are going to continue with positive
incentives, if only because it is administratively difficult for companies to ensure
compliance with programs such as Weyco’s, says Delta’s Zonakis. The Weyco approach
also runs counter to Delta’s culture, she says.
Sprint has adopted a kind of negative reinforcement: It charges
smokers higher health premiums than nonsmokers. On the other hand, any participant
who is a nonsmoker or signs up for Sprint’s smoking-cessation program gets a 6
percent discount in health plan premiums.
Now the company is looking at extending that program to reward
other healthy behaviors. For example, Sprint could provide discounts to employees who
participate in exercise programs. "We want to move beyond singling out smokers," Case
says.
Workforce Management, September 2005, pp. 66-69 --
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Jessica Marquez is New York bureau chief for Workforce Management. E-mail editors@workforce.com to
comment.
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