Title: A Workplace Culture of Health
1- A Workplace Culture of Health
- Population Health Disease Management Colloquium
- Ray Fabius MD
- Strategic Adviser to the President - Walgreens
Health Wellness - March 3rd, 2009
- Date
2Lets Start with the Employer View
- Runaway health care costs without controls
- Threatens company viability
- Misuse, overuse, and underuse
- Need for Transparency
- Apply TQM, Six Sigma, TPS, Lean to Health care
- Consumerism
- Purchase Perceive Care in Silos
- Human Resources Leaders are Risk Advice
- Often Depend on Payers and Consultants for next
answer - Data deficient
- Workplace Safety
- Work Environment
- Workplace Health
3Todays Agenda
- The Success of Occupational Health Workplace
Safety - Translating that Success to Healthcare
- How can you create a Culture of Health inside a
company? - What would the value be in creating a Culture of
Health? - Examples of Successful Efforts to Create a
Culture of Health
4Occupational Motor Vehicle Safety Improvements
5One Glaring Exception The Healthcare Environment
is Becoming More Hazardous
6Effectiveness Pathway to Workplace Safety
Identify Opportunities
Measure Baseline
Establish Interventions
Implement Action Plan
Re Measure Data
Analyze for Effectiveness
7Prevention of Errors in Workplace Safety
- Technology
- Automated Processes
- Decrease Complexity
- Worker Removed from Process
- Operator Monitors Automated System for Abnormal
Events - Prepared to handle response or solution
- Standardization
8Tipping the Scale
Leadership Resources Awareness Guidelines Collabor
ation Standardization Simplification
Documentation Non-Punitive Active Learning Change
Agent Technology Training Feedback
Errors
Safety
Healthcare Delivery
9Conditions that Prevent Workplace Errors
- Good Managerial Decisions
- Right Equipment
- Maintenance of Equipment
- Skilled Knowledgeable Workforce
- Reasonable Workload Schedule
- Well-Designed Jobs
- Clear Guidance on Desired Undesired Performance
10Lessons Learned in Workplace SafetyPotential
Application to Workplace Health
- Growing Awareness
- Comprehensive Strategies
- Intolerance with Errors
- National Focal Point for Leadership
- Dissemination of Information
- Regulatory Responsibility
- Research
- Expanding Knowledge Base
- Substantial Resources
11What About the White Collar World?
- Executive Health
- Ergonomics
- Stress Management
- Resiliency
- Work Accommodation
- Ex pat Services
- Work / Life Balance
12Building a Culture of Health
STEP 1
COMPANY ASSESSMENT
STEP 2
DATA AND METRICS
STEP 3
OPERATIONAL PLAN
INTERVENTIONS
STEP 4
STEP 5
EVALUATION REFINEMENTS
13Changes Required to Create a Culture of Health
- Create Awareness
- Identify Gap from Benchmark
- Study Intervention Options
- Operationalize Best Efforts
- Training and Education
- Establish Accountabilities
- Celebrate Success
14How can you create a Culture of Health inside
your company?
- Branding
- Champions
- Rack Stack
- Incentives
- Mandates
- An environment of health
- Fitness
- Risk Assessment
- Risk Reduction
- Disease Management
- Proof of Concept
- Mainstream success
15Resources to Effect Change
- Leadership
- Attention
- Investment
16How do Health Wellness effect productivity?
- Health care self-insured
- Workers Compensation
- Disability
- Absence
- Presenteeism
- Poor performance
17The Skill The WillBut What About Not Being Ill!
18Total Employee Health Related Costs
Health Care Costs
Medical Care Hospitalization Pharmacy Diagnostic
Testing Behavioral Health Physical Therapy
DIRECT
Medical 22 Disability 4 Productivity Loss
74
Overtime Pay
Lost Productivity
Illness Injury Travel to Off-site MD
Subpar Quality
OTHER COSTS
Temporary Staffing
Absenteeism
Employee and Customer Dissatisfaction
Presenteeism
Turnover
Replacement Training
Administrative
Source Integrated Benefits Institute, 2000
Missed Deadlines
Adverse Bottom Line Impact
19The Connection Between Health Human Capital is
Significant
- Over 22 of working age adults report
health-related work impairment in the past 30
days from chronic illness. Those with impairment
average 6.7 lost days. Equivalent to 2.5 billion
impaired days/year. -Kessler - American Productivity Audit Top 5 reasons for
productivity loss result in 180 billion in lost
time. -Stewart - Illness and disability reduced total work hours
by approximately 8.6. Nearly 8.7 million
Americans were completely unable to work. The
loss to the U.S. economy represented about 468
billion. -Berger
20Leading by Example
- Investment in health delivery is consistent
with a long-term view of maximizing return on
human capital. Michael CritelliCEO,
Pitney-Bowes - A healthy, engaged, and productive workforce is
critical to maximizing business performance and
driving sustainable growth. Dean
OestreichPresident, Pioneer Hi-Bred
International, Inc. - Our profit potential is inextricably linked to
the capability and performance of our employees.
Andrew LiverisPresident and CEO, The Dow
Chemical Company
21Factors Affecting Health Productivity
- Health-related factors
- Physical health issues
- Chronic disease
- Acute illness
- Lifestyle issues
- Health risks
- Preventive care compliance
- Behavioral health
- Other factors
- Demographics
- Caregiving
- Work/life imbalance
- Financial concerns
- Employer health benefits
Productivity-related factors Absenteeism STD and
LTD programs FMLA policies Sick leave
policy Effect on team morale Value of time in
production Workers Compensation Presenteeism
Work relationships Job security and
control Health issues Work issues Ergonomic
issues Safety concerns
22Integrated Data to Evaluate Health
Productivity Costs
IHPM Journal, 2003
- HR/payroll
- employee demographics
- time reporting
- employee surveys
- turnover/overtime data
- performance appraisals
- Lost time data
- STD
- LTD
- FMLA
- PTO/sick leave
- Medical data
- group health
- pharmacy
- mental health
- health risk appraisals
- disease prevalence
- EAP utilization
Integrated data analysis
- Business data
- customer satisfaction
- production data
- quality data
- operational data
- net income
- gross revenue
- human capital costs
- WC/Safety data
- OSHA, accident
- reporting
- drug testing
- WC claims data
- Productivity metrics
- staffing/overtime
- per employee costs
- and revenues
- self-reported presenteeism
23Top 15 Drivers of Lost Work Time
Source Kesslers HPQ Adjusted to Workforce
24The Total Cost of Illness
Goetzel, et al. JOEM 2004
arthritis
diabetes
allergy
depression
migraine
25Health Risks Associated with Productivity Loss
The More Health Risks the Greater the Absence
The More Health Risks the Greater the Limitations
Some Health Risks Cause Greater Lost Work Hours
26Poor Health Impact Continuum of Employee
Performance Outcomes
Not doing well while working
errors complaints delays team breakdown
Not doing work on work time
unscheduled breaks unfocused time health exams on
work time information gathering
Not at work
unscheduled absence disability workers
comp replacement workers
Lost to the workforce
permanent disability early retirement due to
health issues premature death spousal illness
27HHS - The Workplace is a great location for
preventive programs
- Employers are becoming more aware
- that obesity, lack of physical activity, and
- tobacco use are adversely affecting the
- health and productivity of their
- employees and ultimately, the businesses
- bottom line.
- As a result
- Innovative employers are providing a variety of
work-site-based health promotion disease
prevention programs - Significant return on investment for the employer
(median ROI of 3.14) -
28Driving Healthy Lifestyles
Smoking 0 Tobacco (None) Diabetes / Heart
Disease 5 Diet (5 Fruits/Vegetables A Day) Lack
of Exercise 10 Exercise (10,000 Steps A
Day) Overweight / Obesity 25 Weight (Body Mass
Index, weight to height ratio, less than 25
healthy)
Message Dont Smoke
Message Eat healthy
Message Be active
Message Maintain a healthy weight
Rewards (intrinsic / extrinsic) vs. Competitions
(rack stack)
29A High Performance Network can reduce an employee
communitys random access of care
- Studies show
- half or more employees believe
- all doctors and hospitals provide
- the same care
- half or more employees are not aware of
guidelines of care - physicians referral patterns are based on
consanguinity, friendship, financial ties and
proximity.
However the majority of an employee community
seek validation from their trusted clinician
before proceeding with a treatment decision.
30Identifying best specialists hospitals
directing employees to them
The TFHC specialty referral rate is 2/3 lower
than the community referral rate.
28.3
28.3
2007 Actual Billed Charges Paid January thru June
2007 Actual Billed Charges Paid January thru June
9.4
8.7
Using Best Hospitals 2006 vs 2007
Toyota presentation to IHPM
Using Best Specialists 2006 vs 2007
31Philosophical Approach to Onsite Health Services
Employers Health, Safety and Productivity
Programs
Occupational Health
Health and Wellness
Keeping Employees Safe and at Work
Keeping Employees Healthy
On-site health center provides the framework and
technological infrastructure for the delivery of
effective HP programs
32Clinical Outcomes for Health Center Users with
Diabetes
(2003 to 2005) N336
33Projecting Long-Term Economic Impact (Diabetes
Care Improvement)
- Analysis of risk factors
- predictive modeling indicate a
- significant reduction in risk of
- diabetes complications over
- the 2003-2005 period for
- diabetics under care
- Potential future economic
- impact - reduced patient
- morbidity has been estimated
- at an average of 1,800 of
- avoided medical costs per
- patient per year (before
- inflation adjustment)
- Economic impact does not
- include impact on
- productivity or disability
- outcomes
34(No Transcript)
35GE Global Medical Network 230 On-Site Clinics
600 Doctors Nurses
The issue of benefits extends beyond our
country's borders
36Summary
- The Success of Occupational Health Workplace
Safety - Translating that Success to Healthcare
- How can you create a Culture of Health inside a
company? - What would the value be in creating a Culture of
Health? - Examples of Successful Efforts to Create a
Culture of Health