Title: The Rewards of Wellness
1The Rewards of Wellness
- Gaston Regional Chamber
- October 3, 2008
2Wellness questions to start with
- How do you define Wellness?
- Do you believe Wellness works?
- Do you believe Wellness works for
- Large employers
- Small Group
3Wellness questions to start with
- Who pays for Sickness, in the absence of
Wellness? - What are the obstacles?
- Do you believe that Wellness can be effective?
4What Does This Chart Tell Us?
Average Cost Per Employee vs. Consumer Price
Index
SOURCE Add source here
5Traditional Drivers
- The skyrocketing price of health benefits
Medical costs for employers have outpaced
inflation in all but four of the past 20 years. - Among the culprits expensive technology, less
stringent HMO cost management, and rapidly rising
drug costs.
SOURCE Mercer National Survey Of
Employer-sponsored Health Plans 2003 Bureau Of
Labor Statistics
6(No Transcript)
7What Are the Real Culprits?
- Unhealthy Lifestyles
- Demographics
- Lack of Personal Responsibility
8Sick to Healthy
Health Care Spending
9Sick to Healthy
3/4 of spending is due to diseases caused by
unhealthy lifestyles
Health Care Spending
10Unhealthy Lifestyles
SOURCE Add source here
11Unhealthy Lifestyles
Blood Pressure
Smoking
Overweight
Exercise
Diet
STRESS
1 out of 4 adults smoke
1 out of 3 has high blood pressure
2 out of 3 are overweight or obese
3 out of 4 lack proper exercise
4 out of 5 have poor diets
SOURCE Add source here
12Personal Responsibility
of Selected Chronic Diseases That Are Likely
Lifestyle Related and Avoidable
SOURCE The Culprit The Cure, Why lifestyle is
the culprit behind Americas poor health. Steven
G. Aldana, PH.D
13Cost per Risk Factor
Annual Medical Cost
SOURCE Employee Benefit News May 1997
14The Chronic Impact
- Average number of lost annual work days per
person/condition
- Depression 25.6 days
- Cancer 16.9 days
- Respiratory Disorders 14.7 days
- Asthma 12 days
- Migraines 10.7 days
- Allergies 8.2 days
- Heart Disease 6.8 days
- Arthritis 5.9 days
- Diabetes 2 days
- Hypertension 1 day
Chronic disease has 1 TRILLION impact on U.S.
lost productivity each year.
15Prevention
- Preventable illness makes up approximately 80
percent of the burden of illness and 90 of all
healthcare costs - Is Prevention the Solution?
- Prevention vs. Wellness
- www.preventdisease.com
16What is Wellness?
- Wellness is a process involving the integration
of many dimensions social, physical, emotional,
environmental, spiritual, vocational,
intellectual that enhance the health and
well-being of any individual. The process is
designed to help a person make choices that
result in positive lifestyle changes thus,
improving individual and community health and
well-being.
DEFINITION Ball Brothers Foundation.)
17What is a Wellness Program?
- Corporate, or workplace Wellness can be defined
as - An organized program in the worksite that is
intended to assist employees and their family
members in making voluntary behavior changes that
reduce their health and injury risks, improve
their health consumer skills and enhance their
individual productivity and well-being.
18Does Wellness Really Work?
- A meta-review of 42 published studies of worksite
health promotion programs shows - Average 28 reduction in sick leave absenteeism
- Average 26 reduction in health costs
- Average 30 reduction in workers compensation
and disability management claims costs - Average 5.93-to-1 savings-to-cost ratio
19The High Cost of Smoking
- A 40-year-old who quits and puts the savings
into a 401(k) could save 220,000 by age 70
- A smoker costs 3,856 a year in added
healthcare costs and lost productivity to their
employer
SOURCE National Business Group on Health
20What Does Smoking Cost Your Company?
Calculating the Cost of Smoking
- Number of employees x 0.25
- Tobacco use is about 25 of the total population.
- x 3,856 per year
- Companies spend 3,856 per smoker per year in
direct medical costs and lost productivity. - Estimated cost per year in excess medical
expenditures and lost productivity
21What Does Smoking Cost Your Company?
Example
- 100 employees x 0.25
- (25 employees who use tobacco)
- x 3,856 per year
- 96,625 cost per year in business-borne costs
associated with smoking
22A 112 Increase in Stress Rx
- In 2005, 357 million new prescriptions were
written for psychotherapeutic drugs such as
Ativan, Klonipin, Paxil, Prozac, Serzone, Zoloft,
Xanax and Wellbutrin - Now the most commonly prescribed medications
23Dementia
- Those who most often are anxious or depressed
were 40 times more likely to develop mild
cognitive impairment, a form of memory loss that
is often a transitional stage between normal
aging and dementia. - The latest research suggests that chronic stress
may harm parts of the brain responsible for
responding to stress.
24Overweight Obesity Rates 1999-2004
- 67 of adults 71 of Men
- Stabilized for women- 62. Still higher obesity
overall - 33 of teens overweight
- 17 of teens obese, up from 15
- BMI is no longer best indicator waist size is
more accurate for disease
SOURCE UC Berkeley Wellness newsletter
25Obesity Trends Among U.S. Adults -- 19931
BMI 30, or 30 lbs overweight for 54 person
26Obesity Trends Among U.S. Adults -- 20052
BMI 30, or 30 lbs overweight for 5 4 person
No Data 1519 2024 2529
30
27Unhealthy Demographics
of Americans That Are Overweight or Obese
SOURCE The Culprit The Cure, Why lifestyle is
the culprit behind Americas poor health.
Steven G. Aldana, PH.D
28Health Risks
Type-2 Diabetes 300Increased Risk
High Cholesterol 200Increased Risk
Heart Disease 200Increased Risk
JointArthritis 200Increased Risk
High Blood Pressure 200Increased Risk
29Obesity Increases Risk for Disease in Virtually
Every Organ System
- Cardiovascular
- CVD
- Hypertension
- Congestive
- Heart Failure
- Pulmonary
- Sleep apnea
- Asthma
- Endocrine
- Type 2 diabetes
- Metabolic Syndrome
- Cholesterol disorders
- Infertility
- Increased pressure in the brain
- Headache, ear or vision problems (not due to
tumor)
- Gastrointestinal
- Gastric reflux
- Gallbladder disease
- Nonalcoholic fatty liver
- Musculoskeletal
- Osteoarthritis
- Gout
- DVT Pulmonary Embolus
- Certain cancers
- Breast
- Prostate
- Colon
- Macular Degeneration
SOURCE A. McDermott, Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo
30A Weighty Issue
- A Duke University Medical Center analysis found
that obese workers filed
2xworkers' compensation claims
7xhigher medical costs from those claims
13more days of work lost from work injury or
work illness (than non-obese workers)
31Epidemic
- But far more dramatic was the increase of
spending on diabetes drugs, which jumped 14.5
percent during the year. - Diabetes-related spending is projected to rise
between 60 and 80 percent by 2009. - The potential future incidence of diabetes based
on obesity statistics is staggering, the report
stated.
32Definition of Obesity
- What is it?
- How do Obese people define it?
- How do Obese people view themselves?
- Morbid Obesity
- We need new terms
33The Cost of Obesity
RYGB Patients
Obesity Surgeries
RYGB Surgeries
600 Increase
200 Increase
36 Increase
Hospitalization
SOURCE WebMD
34Number of Bariatric Surgeries in the US
SOURCE American Society for Metabolic and
Bariatric Surgery
35The Cost of Obesity
HealthcareServices
Complications After Surgery
Medications
20 of patients return to hospital
36 Higher
77 Higher
Hospitalization
SOURCE Surgeon General, Obesity in America,
national health Policy Forum, July 2003
36(No Transcript)
371/3 of US Adults Diabetic or Pre-Diabetic
- Average American has very high risk of diabetes
- Jun 16 (Reuters Health) - Body mass index (BMI),
the ratio of body weight to height, is tightly
linked to lifetime risk of diabetes mellitus,
researchers reported at the Scientific Sessions
of the American Diabetes Association. "On
average, every American has a very high risk of
diabetes," CDC investigators told conference
participants.
38Rx for Exercise
- Moderate physical activity can decrease the risks
for heart disease (by 18 to 84) - Stroke (by 21 to 34)
- Diabetes (by 16 to 50)
- Colon malignancies (by 30 to 40)
- Dementia (by 15 to 50)
39Accountability for Health
74 feel that employees should be
held accountable
4 of employees feel they should be held
accountable
40If Personal Responsibility Fails
- Law Firm Predicts Workplace Wellness Programs
Will Become Mandatory - Legal Fallout
- Protect yourself HIPAA, ADA, ERISA rules all
have impact
41Move to Wellness-based System
- Why do we wait for someone to become diseased and
then spend huge sums of money to manage their
disease? - Millions of Dollars spent on developing drugs
that could be spent on prevention and avoiding
disease. - Qualified Wellness coaches plus MDs
42Core Topics Programs 1999
- Back Care and Injury Prevention
- Physical Exercise
- Stress Management
- Tobacco Use
- Substance Abuse Prevention
43Additions to the Big 5
- Weight Management
- Medical Self-Care
- Consumer Health Education
- Cholesterol Reduction
- Nutritional Interventions
- Selected Biometrics Testing
- Hypertension Management
44Quick-start Wellness
45Personal Health Profiles
46Real Solutions
- Foster Personal Responsibility for Individual
Health - Motivation, tools, incentives, and rewards to
stay well and reduce Healthcare costs - Workplace is the ideal environment
- Companies must develop a Culture of Health and
Wellness
47Elements of a Successful Wellness Program
- Support from ALL levels of management
- Buy-in from Employees
- Heath Risk Assessments and Appraisals
- Establish Wellness Team/Coordinator
- Develop program based on interest, needs,
appropriate interventions - Effective use of Incentives
- Measure results and effectiveness
48Required Elements of Compliant Wellness Plan
The value of the reward must not exceed 20 of
the total premium for an individual employees
health coverage (may be available to
dependents)
1
2
The program must be reasonably designed to
promote good health or prevent disease
3
The program must allow employees to qualify at
least once per year
The reward must be available to all similarly
situated individuals and a reasonable
alternative standard must be offered if the
general standard cannot be met due to a medical
condition
4
5
Plan materials must offer and clearly disclose
the alternative standards
49Whats a Wellness Program?
- Disclosure of Alternative Standard sample
pre-approved verbiage8 - If it is unreasonably difficult due to a medical
condition for you to achieve the standards for
the reward under this program, or if it is
medically inadvisable for you to attempt to
achieve the standards for the reward under this
program, contact us at (INSERT PHONE NUMBER) and
we will work with you to develop another way to
qualify for the reward. - If it is unreasonably difficult due to a medical
condition for you to achieve a cholesterol count
under 200, or if it is medically inadvisable for
you to achieve a cholesterol count under 200,
call us at the number below and we will work with
you to develop another way to get the discount.
50Is it Compliant or Not?
- The total annual premium (employer and employee)
for a single coverage under an employers plan is
2,500 per year - A wellness program offers a reward that waives
the annual 250 deductible for the next plan year
for participants who have a BMI of between 20 and
27 - The BMI is determined shortly before the
beginning of the calendar year and tested at the
end of each plan year - Materials state that participants who have
medical conditions and for whom it would be
unreasonable to attain the BMI standard will be
given the same discount if the participants each
walk for 20 minutes three days a week - If a member cannot follow the walking schedule,
he or she will be given the same discount if he
or she implements a dietary regimen
51Example Is Compliant Because
- It limits the reward 250 deductible falls below
the regulatory max (20) - It is reasonably designed to promote good health
- The reward is available to all similarly situated
participants - Reasonable alternatives are available to obtain
the reward - The plan describes the terms of the program
52An Example of Noncompliance
- Same facts as previous example except
- Plan does not offer an alternative standard to
employees who cannot meet the BMI requirement - Not a compliant program
53Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)
- ADA prohibits employment discrimination against
individuals with a disability or those perceived
as having a disability and limits the
circumstances in which an employer may require
physical exams or medical inquiries. - Wellness program participation should be
voluntary - Any medical information gathered in connection
with the wellness program should be kept
confidential and separate from the employees
personnel records and not used to discriminate
against the employee.
54An Example of a Potential ADA Compliance Issue
- Employer's group health plan requires employee to
complete a health risk assessment (i.e., health
risk questionnaire, associated biometrics and
results counseling) in order to be eligible to
participate in employer's group health plan for
the next plan year. - The employee is not asked to meet any standard
based on a health status factor. - However, if the employee fails or refuses to
complete the health risk assessment, the employee
will not have access to group health coverage for
the following plan year.
55ERISA Considerations
- Is the wellness program an ERISA "group health
plan"? - ERISA definition of "group health plan"
- An employee welfare benefit plan to the extent
that the plan provides medical care, including
items and services paid for as medical care, to
employees or their dependents (as defined under
the terms of the plan) directly or through
insurance, reimbursement, or otherwise. - ERISA and Internal Revenue Code definition of
"medical care" - The diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or
prevention of disease, or amounts paid for the
purpose of affecting any structure or function of
the body.
56ERISA Considerations
- If the wellness program is an ERISA "group health
plan," then the plan sponsor faces the following
issues - Form 5500 filing
- Plan document and SPD requirements
- Prohibited transactions and incentive/rewards
- In addition, an ERISA "group health plan"
automatically faces compliance issues under HIPAA
privacy and security rules and COBRA. - Note Unless the plan sponsor oversteps its
involvement, a health savings account ("HSA") is
not an ERISA group health plan and is not subject
to COBRA.
57HIPAA Privacy and Security Rules
- Privacy
- Disclosure of PHI to the plan sponsor is limited
to - Summary health information for limited purposes
such as - Premium bides
- Modifying, amending or terminating a plan
- Enrollment and disenrollment
- As provided by plan amendment, for plan
administration only or pursuant to an
authorization - Use of PHI within a health plan is permitted
- Security
- Electronic PHI triggers security requirements
58Other Legal Considerations
- Federal and state tax laws
- Some wellness benefits, incentives and rewards
offered to employees may be taxable, which
requires income tax withholding, the assessment
of FICA and FUTA taxes and W-2 reporting. - ADEA
- May prohibit age based distinctions and/or
rewards in a wellness program
59Other Legal Considerations
- State lifestyle and smoker nondiscrimination laws
- State laws may prohibit programs that make
distinctions and/or reward based on lawful
activities - Some prohibit actions based on any lawful off
duty activity - Some prohibit actions based on use of lawful
consumable products - Some prohibit actions based on any lawful
recreational activity - Some specifically prohibit actions based on the
use of tobacco products
60The Result is Happier, Healthier, More
Productive Employees
61Who Benefits?
Who Reaps the Rewards of Wellness?
62Rewards of Workplace Wellness
63What Are YOU Going To Do?
- 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 promote Personal Responsibility?
64Questions Follow-up