Critical Success Factors for an Effective Workplace Wellness Program



Similar documents
Build It and They Will Come: Employee Wellness Programming that Works

British Columbia Institute of Technology

Introduction to Wellness Programs. Why Get Started

Health Management: Creating & Managing a Successful Wellness Program. Presented by Erick Hathorn, Health Management Practice Leader

WHITE PAPER Wellness that Works

Internal Wellness Programs in the Corporate Environment: Success and Failures

Bonnie Dunton RN COHC OHN DuPont NA Region IHS Consultant

Aligning action with aims: Optimising the benefits of workplace wellness

Collaborative Onsite Medical Care in the Workplace

Fund Health Benefits Fund

CORPORATE WELLNESS PROGRAM

The Jefferson Health Plan. Member Organization Wellness Program Incentive Guide July 1, 2015 June 30, 2016

Dealing with wellness and lifestyle issues. DEPT OF MEDICINE AND OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH, CRI

Health Insurance Wellness Programs. What s in it for you and how they affect your insurance premiums

Data Analytics and Wellness Programming

Using Onsite Health Centers to Integrate Worksite Activities. Larry S. Boress Executive Director National Association of Worksite Health Centers

EMPLOYEE WELLNESS KEY ELEMENTS FOR A SUCCESSFUL PROGRAM

County of San Diego Employee Wellness Program: Employee Engagement

Corporate Health & Wellness

Creating an effective wellness strategy

NJWELL SHBP/SEHBP. Overview for Employees enrolled in the SHBP/SEHBP

The UnitedHealthcare Diabetes Health Plan Better information. Better decisions. Better results. Agenda

How to Justify Workplace Health and Wellness Programs: It s All About Value on Investment. Case Closed.

TotalCare Wellness Programs Reduce Health Care Costs and Improve Productivity

Profits of Wellness Turning the high cost of poor health habits into healthy returns

Wellness in the Workplace 2012: An Optum Research Update

Worksite Wellness Criteria and Guidelines

Setting up a. Wellness Program. A Checklist for Success

Public Service Commission. Plan for saskatchewan.ca

Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan is a nonprofit corporation and independent licensee of the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association.

Healthy Workplace Operational Plan

Outcomes-Based Health Risk Management: More Than a Wellness Program

Burns & McDonnell On-Site Clinic

Ingredients of Successful Workplace Wellness Programs by Graham Lowe

Mental Health at Work - A Review

Oswald Wellness Playbook. Program Measurement

Worksite Wellness At MillerCoors

Developing Wellness Programs in the Public Sector

HEALTH MANAGEMENT TOOLKIT SMALL BUSINESS SOLUTIONS

Against the Growing Burden of Disease. Kimberly Elmslie Director General, Centre for Chronic Disease Prevention

WORKING WELL: A Global Survey of Health Promotion and Workplace Wellness Strategies

Employee Health Promotion Support Program

Total Rewards for Employees

CREATING A POPULATION HEALTH PLAN FOR VIRGINIA

B UILDING A T O R ONTO PUBLIC S E R V ICE

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS (RFP) VIRTUAL PROVIDERS FOR THE CDC-CERTIFIED NATIONAL DIABETES PREVENTION PROGRAM (NDPP)

Corporate. Report COUNCIL DATE: Jan. 4, 1999 NO: R1727 REGULAR COUNCIL. TO: Mayor & Council DATE: December 15, 1998

TACKLING POPULATION HEALTH MANAGEMENT with Worksite Wellness & Community Outreach

APPLICATION FORM. Large Organizations. Community Champions.

Wellworks For You is an international corporate wellness company specializing in the design, implementation and management of comprehensive wellness

Wellness Strategies. Use and Management of Downsizing to Improve Employee Health, Performance and the Bottom Line. SHRM Foundation Executive Briefing

How to Increase Value on Investment for Your Wellness Program

Worksite Wellness Employee Interest Survey

Employer-Sponsored Clinics & Telemedicine Onsite, Online, Anywhere!

Total Rewards and Employee Well-Being. research. A report by WorldatWork February 2012

TELUS Healthy Living Presented to Alberta Wellness Symposium. Janet Crowe Member of the TELUS team October 1, 2013

Transforming the pharmacy into a strategic asset

University of Michigan Health Risk Assessment (HRA) and Trend Management System (TMS)

Transcription:

Critical Success Factors for an Effective Workplace Wellness Program Mona Nazif Senior Manager, Human Resources City of Markham Genevieve Sadak National Lead, Employer Services Centric Health

What We Will Share with You Today Critical success factors for an effective workplace wellness program Overview of City of Markham s Wellness Program The importance of measures- baseline and ongoing data Key programming drivers Engaging employees and increasing employee participation Plans for future continued enhancement 2

City of Markham 1,000 regular full time employees, multi-unionized 300 Firefighters- fire stations 200 outside workers- multi-site 500 office workers- multi-site Gender split- 69% male; 31% female Average age- 46 Corporate culture Lean Fiscal accountability Use of Excellence Canada (quality management) framework 3

Critical Success Factors- Wellness Program Executive sponsorship and visible support Embedded in organization s strategic direction and frameworks Defined objectives and defined budget Engaged committee Measurement- baseline and ongoing Program alignment with demographic profile, needs and interests of employee population Effective partnership with a Wellness provider vendor Effective marketing Employee accessibility 4

Overview of City s Wellness Program Wellness Program established in 2000 Aligned with organization s quality framework- Excellence Canada- specifically staff engagement outcome Wellness spend per year is approximately $60,000 Baseline data established Cross organization Wellness Committee Healthy workplace policy developed in 2007 Program deliverables a joint partnership Vendor- annual programming, screenings, clinics, quarterly publications, Lunch and Learns, challenges, annual report City- EAP, fitness membership, onsite programs (yoga, weight management, massage), annual data, Intranet site, training 5

City s Wellness Mission The City of Markham is committed to providing Wellness programming, services and education to employees (and indirectly to the families of employees) for the purposes of enhancing the overall health and well being of employees as well as positively impacting organization effectiveness and productivity Wellness programming, services and education will address the health concerns of the overall workforce as well as health needs and interests of employees across the organization 6

City s Wellness Program Objectives Enhance health and well being of employees Address overall health concerns of the organization Align with employee interests and needs Positively impact upon the organization s engagement, effectiveness and productivity Enhance organizational culture Ensure alignment with the organization s direction 7

Role of Wellness Committee The Committee has cross organization representation The Committee plays a number of key roles in moving forward the Wellness Program: Advise Champion Support Communicate to staff 8

Wellness Return on Investment Benefits of Wellness programs are well documented but are often difficult for organizations to measure/prove Organizations with health and productivity programs report 11% higher revenue per employee Estimate of cost of depression in workforce- $9,920/ee Average cost/year of a smoker to an organization is $3,396 80% of heart disease, stroke and Type II diabetes can be prevented through healthy lifestyle 25% of Canadians have 3 or more metabolic risk factors Wellness programs can reduce absenteeism/ee per year (potentially 1.5 to 1.7 days/ee) Sources: Sun Life Canadian Health Index; Towers Watson Staying @ Work 9

City Wellness Program Measurement City established baseline data from start- drug utilization and costs, extended health care, absenteeism, LTD Return on investment based on: City s absenteeism year over year is less than key benchmarks (2013-6.5 days per employee versus 12.5 days for public sector Stats Canada) Escalating drug costs versus that of National Drug Expenditure trends (most recent cost differential was 7.6%) LTD usage EAP usage (we view a strong usage rate as preventative) Wellness program participation rates Municipal comparators 10

City Programming Determinants The City aligns its Wellness programming against the health profile of its demographic, employee needs/ interests Workforce health risk profile determined by: Healthcare issues related to City s gender, age, job composition Utilization rate by prescription categories Reasons for EAP visits Reasons for long term disability Aggregate screening results Employee needs and interests determined by: Bi-annual survey Feedback from Committee Program participation rates 11

Focus Areas for City s Programming The results of the analysis of the City s workforce health risk profile and employee interests/needs has led to a focus on the following Wellness areas: Cardiovascular disease Diabetes Mental health and stress 12

Employee Engagement and Participation Key 2013/14 Wellness objective with our new vendor Centric Health- Increase employee access, engagement and participation Increase employee access to Wellness programming, particularly males Increase participation 13

Engagement Strategy Analyze employee interest survey data Use of Centric Health portal and City Intranet Development of a consolidated, month at a glance Wellness calendar on Intranet Use of mobile Wellness trucks and/or on-site programs at satellite offices to attract Firefighters and outside workers Ensure broad employee representation on Committee Continued development of programs that reflect interests of employees while also addressing health risk profile of organization Ensure programming location, timing and topics meet varied interests of staff Leverage Committee in terms of needs assessment and marketing 14

Results of Employee Interest Survey 21% respondent rate (100% increase over previous year) 81% of respondents interested in participating in Wellness Program but only 51% have participated Employees hear about program through e-news, Intranet, word of mouth, email Most popular Centric Health programs- Health and Wellness Fair, blood pressure machine, flu shot clinic, screenings and challenges Most popular City programs- subsidized fitness, onsite yoga, onsite massage Most listed reasons for not participating- too busy, inconvenient location or time, unaware of programs offered 15

Successes Bringing biometric and health screenings to Fire Stations Challenges- fitness, nutrition, stress/work life balance etc. Piloting yoga for men and lunch hour badminton- survey Increased EAP usage (from 11.4% to 18.3%) as a result of increased marketing and stigma reduction Wellness booth at Employee Appreciation Day Blood pressure machine Flu clinics On-site programming- weight management, yoga, massage, subsidized fitness membership Seminars targeted to outside worker interests 16

Less Successful Travelling displays Challenges based on individuals (versus teams) Use of portal (may be an issue of digital literacy, access to computer, workload) Not offering programming to multiple sites 17

Next Steps and Future Planning Continue to target specific departments in terms of location and programming Continue to monitor use of technology (portal) Focus on employee interests and workforce health risk profile Continue to focus on team challenges, screenings Enhance focus on mental health Monitor ROI Monitor participation Continued joint partnership with our Wellness vendor 18

Comments & Questions