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U.S. Wellness Programs Aimed at Reducing Health Care Costs
The survey of 555 organizations by Buck Consultants found health care cost reduction is the primary goal in the U.S.; Canadian employers cite employee attraction and retention; and European employers say they most want to reduce employee absences due to sickness or disability, according to a press release on the survey results. Workplace morale was cited by employers in other regions as a reason for wellness programs, and some say improving productivity is the goal.
Thirty-three percent of U.S. respondents attribute a dip in their health care costs to wellness initiatives, with half reporting a reduction of two to five trend percentage points a year. That leaves about 67% of U.S. employers who did not report a measurable success.
Barry Hall, a Buck principal who directed the survey, said the lack of measurable progress is because many wellness initiatives have barely had time to get off the ground and some employers have not devised a way to measure the results.
“Furthermore, not all employers have yet found the
most effective tools and programs to achieve the impact
they desire or expect,” Hall said in the release. “Clearly,
many employers still have work to do to demonstrate the
return on investment necessary to ensure senior
management’s continued support of their programs.”
U.S.employers spent an average of $135 per employee per
year on wellness programs and that cost typically included
educational resources, programming, health services,
screening, coaching, technology, and employee
communications. Employers spent an average of $100 per
employee on incentive programs to try to get them to
participate in the wellness programs.
The most frequently used wellness programs worldwide are employee assistance programs (EAPs), health risk assessments (HRAs), and immunizations (such as flu shots).
The survey can be purchased from Buck’s for $100 and ordered online at www.bucksurveys.com .