The Health Impacts of Social Networking - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 37
About This Presentation
Title:

The Health Impacts of Social Networking

Description:

... workplaces, making them the perfect settings for fitness and wellness programs. ... How many people are at the gym in February? 2. No support from peers ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:196
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 38
Provided by: daniel303
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Health Impacts of Social Networking


1
The Health Impacts of Social Networking
  • Presenter
  • Dr. Daniel Dunlop

2

Scope of the Problem
  • National Healthcare Spending
  • Where are we now?

http//www.cms.hhs.gov/NationalHealthExpendData/do
wnloads/proj2006.pdf
3
Economic Impacts of Rising Health Care Costs
Source http//www.nchc.org/facts/Economy/effects_
on_business_operations.pdf
4
FACTS
  • 2/3 of American adults are overweight or obese
  • Represents a 12 (overweight) and a 70 (obese)
    increase over the last decade alone
  • 16 of children and adolescents ages 6-19 years
    are overweight (including obese)
  • Represents a 45 increase over the last decade
  • Increase occurred for all population subsets,
    including children, the elderly, and all
    racial/ethnic groups

Source http//arjournals.annualreviews.org/doi/ab
s/10.1146/annurev.publhealth.26.021304.144628
5
Trends in Obesity
Source National Health and Nutrition Examination
Survey
6
The Top 10 Most Costly Health Conditions
Goetzl, R JOEM 45(1) 5-14 2003
7
Keeping People Healthy Makes Economic Sense
  • Approximately 70 of total burden of disease can
    be traced back to illnesses that are preventable
  • Modifiable health risk factors are precursors to
    many diseases and disorders, and premature death
  • Many modifiable health risks are associated with
    increased health care costs within a relatively
    short time window
  • Modifiable risk factors can be improved through
    effective health promotion and disease prevention
    programs
  • Improvements in the health risk profile of a
    population can lead to reductions in health costs
    and improvements in productivity
  • Well designed and well-implemented programs can
    be cost/beneficial-they can save more money than
    they cost, thus producing a positive return on
    investment (ROI)

Source Ron Goetzel, Ph.D. Rollins School of
Public Health Presentation January 2008
8
How to Overcome the Obstacles?
  • Technology
  • Driving
  • Fast Food
  • Isolation

9
The Opportunity
  • Healthier Employees Mean
  • Fewer medical claims
  • Reduced absenteeism
  • Higher productivity
  • Increased retention
  • Fewer workers compensation claims
  • Less long-term disability

10
The Wellness Continuum
preventionearly detectionearly
interventionmedical interventionmedical
managementend of life initiatives
wellness
  • Click to add test

OPTIMAL HEALTH
CHRONIC ILLNESS
Prevention
Treatment
preventionearly detectionearly
interventionmedical interventionmedical
managementend of life initiatives
11
Health Expenses
The goal is to nudge a Large part of the
population healthier
Disease and Case Management Attack the tail
Population Distribution
0
10,000
Cost
12
Elements of a Robust Program
  • What do the experts say?
  • Measures of key indicators
  • 80 program participation over any 3 year period
  • 70 low risk
  • Maintenance and improvements in work environment
  • - Dr. Dee Edington

Source University of Michigan Health Management
Research Center
13
The Science of Behavior Change
The challenge How do we drive long term
behavior changes?
14
Prochaskas/DiClemente Transtheoretical Model of
Behavior Change
1 J.O. Prochaska and DiClemente, C.,
Transtheoretical Therapy Toward a More
Integrative Model of Change, Psychotherapy
Theory, Research and Practice, 19(3), 1982
15
The Change Process
  • The change process is linear and sequential.
  • Intellectual ( informs )
  • Emotional (engages )
  • Visceral ( moves to action )
  • Cellular (DNA )
  • Prochaska-Stages of Change
  • Pre-Contemplative
  • Contemplative
  • Preparation
  • Action
  • Maintenance
  • At any one time only about 10 of people are
    ready to change.

16
The Change Process
  • The Science of Behavior Change
  • Skinner and Behaviorism. The behavioral model
    derived by psychologist B.F. Skinner provides the
    foundation for most incentive programs.1 The
    diagram below illustrates the components of the
    model

1 B.F. Skinner, The Behavior of Organisms, 1938
17
The Change Process
  • Social Learning Theory.
  • Most health behavior is voluntary and
    results from individual choice. According to
    Kurt Lewins and Albert Banduras social
    learning theory, 1 a number of
    counter-balancing factors affect a health
    behavior, such as cigarette smoking.
    Restraining factors, like stress relief, peer
    pressure, or beliefs that smoking helps to
    control weight, act to maintain the smoking
    behavior. In contrast, enhancing factors like
    social stigmas, awareness of lung cancer risk, or
    laws outlawing smoking in public places, act to
    change it. For change to occur, the balance
    between these factors must be disrupted by
    strengthening the factors leading to a healthier
    behavior and reducing those helping to maintain
    unhealthy behavior. Incentives aim to do the
    former.
  • 1 A. Bandura, Social Learning Theory, 1977

18
Sources of Influence- Peer Pressure and Social
Ability
  • Never run after your Hat-
  • others will be
  • Delighted to do it
  • why spoil their fun?
  • -Mark Twain

Motivation
Ability
Surpass Your Limits
make the undesirable desirable
PERSONAL
Find Strength in Numbers
Harness Peer Pressure
SOCIAL
Design Rewards and Demand Accountability
Change the Environment
STRUCTURAL
Influencer-The power to change anything. page 167
19
Wellness at Work
  • A CDC report says 65 of U.S. adults can be
    reached through their workplaces, making them the
    perfect settings for fitness and wellness
    programs. Since the workplace also has a
    competitive edge, employees engage in friendly
    rivalries that enhance compliance and results.
    One study found more than half of workers in a
    12-week program that split participants into
    teams met their minimum goals. Reuters (02/09)

Source http//www.reuters.com/article/lifestyleMo
lt/idUSTRE5182R420090209?pageNumber1virtualBrand
Channel0
20
Create a Company Culture of Health
The power of social networking and team based
health competitions
  • Published in the New England Journal of Medicine,
    a recent Framingham study concluded that social
    networks can spread positive health behaviors.
    The authors wrote that weight loss interventions
    that provide peer support-that is, that modify
    the persons social network- are more successful
    than those that do not. People are connected,
    and so their health is connected. 1
  • A recent study conducted by Buck Consultants
    found that 81 of surveyed U.S. employers plan to
    offer a health competition program within the
    next three years. 2

1The Spread of Obesity in a Large Social Network
over 32 Years. Christakis, Nicholas A., etal.
The New England Journal of Medicine 2007 2
Working Well A Global Survey of Health
Promotion and Workplace Wellness Studies. Buck
Consultants, Oct.2007
21
People are connected, and so their health is
connected.-Nicholas Christakis
The Spread of Obesity in a Large Social Network
Over 32 Years Nicholas A. Christakis, M.D.,
Ph.D., M.P.H., and James H. Fowler, Ph.D.n engl j
med 3574 www.nejm.370 org july 26, 2007
22
Obesity in Social Networks
  • Chance of becoming obese increased by 57 if a
    person had a friend who became obese.
  • If one sibling became obese, the chance that the
    other would become obese increased by 40.
  • If one spouse became obese, the likelihood that
    the other spouse would become obese increased by
    37.

The Spread of Obesity in a Large Social Network
over 32 Years Nicholas A. Christakis, M.D.,
Ph.D., M.P.H., and James H. Fowler, Ph.D.
23
Leverage the Power of Social Networks
  • the relevance of social influence also suggests
    that it may be possible to harness this same
    force to slow the spread of obesity.
  • Network phenomena might be exploited to spread
    positive health behaviors.
  • Use the trusted social support network within
    companies to generate motivation and culture
    change

The Spread of Obesity in a Large Social Network
over 32 Years Nicholas A. Christakis, M.D.,
Ph.D., M.P.H., and James H. Fowler, Ph.D.
24
Smoking Cessation in Social Networks
  • Smoking cessation by a spouse decreased a
    person's chances of smoking by 67
  • Smoking cessation by a sibling decreased chances
    by 25
  • Smoking cessation by a friend decreased chances
    by 36
  • Among persons working in small firms, smoking
    cessation by a coworker decreased the chances by
    34

The Collective Dynamics of Smoking in a Large
Social Network Nicholas A. Christakis, M.D.,
Ph.D., M.P.H., and James H. Fowler, Ph.D.
25
Leverage teamwork
  • Smoking- and alcohol-cessation programs and
    weight-loss interventions that provide peer
    support that is, that modify the person's
    social network are more successful than those
    that do not.

The Spread of Obesity in a Large Social Network
over 32 Years Nicholas A. Christakis, M.D.,
Ph.D., M.P.H., and James H. Fowler, Ph.D.
26
Challenges for Wellness Programs
  • Low Participation Rates
  • Low Completion Rates
  • Low Long Term Engagement Rates

27
Challenge 1 Low Participation
  • Reasons
  • 1. A top-down approach to wellness
  • What are my employers motives?
  • 2. Obsession with incentives
  • If its so much fun, why do they have to pay me
    to do it?
  • 3. Lack of leadership
  • Why are the executives not participating?
  • 4. Not comprehensive
  • I dont need to lose weight, so why should I
    sign up?
  • 5. Stigmatizing
  • This program is only for people who have a
    weight problem
  • 6. Lack of structure
  • When do I start? How do I track my progress?

28
Challenge 2 Low Completion
  • Reasons
  • 1. Loss of motivation
  • How many people are at the gym in February?
  • 2. No support from peers
  • Everyone else is sedentary, not eating healthy
  • 3. No mechanism to report progress
  • How do you know if your employees are still
    improving?

29
Challenge 3 No Long Term Engagement
  • Reasons
  • 1. Programs get stale
  • Its hard for the employer to keep designing new
    programs
  • 2. Initiatives not designed to instill long-term
    behavior change
  • Short programs, one-time events, not evidence
    based
  • 3. Environment and culture is not conducive to
    wellness
  • Why are we still serving donuts in the cafeteria?

30
Solutions
  • 1. A bottom-up approach to wellness
  • Employees must drive the wellness program
  • 2. Use monetary incentives sparingly
  • Design wellness programs that employees actually
    like
  • 3. Leadership from the top
  • Get your CEO in the program in a notable way!
  • 4. Change the entire company culture
  • Healthy cafeteria food, encourage stair usage,
    exercise breaks
  • 5. You dont have to invent your own programs
  • Let your employees tell you what they want
  • 6. Focus on the entire workforce, not just
    at-risk individuals
  • Focus on teamwork and a healthy lifestyle

31
Understand What Motivates-Make It Fun!
  • Appeal to the majority of the population and the
    individual
  • Implement a variety of communication formats
    (web, phone, paper, onsite)
  • Periodically energize your program
  • (walking challenges, onsite sessions, etc.)
  • Customize incentive offering
  • Obesity is Contagiousso is losing weight and
    quitting smoking- Leverage teamwork and
    accountability

32
Methods
  • 16 week team competition
  • Participants recruited from
  • corporations and community
  • Teams of 5 to 11 people
  • Exercise hours
  • Weight loss
  • Pedometer steps
  • Participants reported results online every two
    weeks

Source Wing etal. Brown Medical School, 2 The
Miriam Hospital, 3 Baruch College/CUNY, 4
University of Connecticut
33
Success for Employees
  • High Participation
  • (up to 50 without incentives)
  • High Completion (73)
  • On average, employees
  • Lose 7.4 lbs
  • Reduce BMI by 1 point
  • Exercise 41 mins daily
  • Walk 4.92 miles daily

A 1- point BMI reduction is considered clinically
significant and has been associated with a
202.30 annual reduction in medical claims and
pharmaceutical costs per employee.1
1 Association of Healthcare Costs with Per Unit
Body Mass Index Increase. Wang et al. JOEM July
2006
34
Long Term Results
  • Shape Up Rhode Island
  • Statewide Participation

Source Wing etal. Brown Medical School, 2 The
Miriam Hospital, 3 Baruch College/CUNY, 4
University of Connecticut
35
The Solution Clients Wellness Calendar
Weight Mgt Classes
Lunch Learns
5ADay Challenge
Team Based Fitness Program
My Stress Solution
Nutrition Scavenger Hunt
Desktop Yoga
Guide to Self-Care
36
You Could Make the Difference!
  • Based on what you learned
  • today
  • What message will you
  • take back to your clients?
  • How will you change the Healthcare delivery
    system?
  • How will you leverage social networking to
    promote health in your community?

37
  • For additional information and support, contact
  • Dr. Daniel Dunlop
  • dandunlop_at_charter.net
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com