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Alcohol, Tobacco and Other Drugs in the Workplace

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Eaton County Substance Abuse Advisory Group (ECSAAG) The Benefits of a Creating a Healthy Work Environment Barry-Eaton District Health Department – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Alcohol, Tobacco and Other Drugs in the Workplace


1
Alcohol, Tobacco and Other Drugs in the Workplace
Eaton County Substance Abuse Advisory Group
(ECSAAG)
  • The Benefits of a Creating a Healthy Work
    Environment

2
Introduction
  • This presentation includes
  • Harmful affects of alcohol, tobacco and other
    drug (ATOD) use on the employee and the employer
  • Data on ATOD use
  • The impact of ATOD use on health care costs and
    workplace productivity
  • Employer benefits of ATOD workplace education,
    cessation programs/services and policies
  • Steps to creating a healthier workplace

3
What are the harmful affects of ATOD use?
  • The personal risks of alcohol, tobacco and
    other drugs

4
Personal risks of alcohol, tobacco and other drugs
  • Tobacco
  • Alcohol and Other Drugs
  • Cigarette smoking accounts for nearly 1 of every
    5 deaths, each year in the U.S.
  • Smoking causes an estimated 90 of all lung
    cancer deaths in men and 80 of all lung cancer
    deaths in women.
  • Alcohol and drugs can damage major organs,
    increase risk of cancers, and even cause death.
  • More than half (57 ) of fatal car crashes
    involve a driver who tested positive for alcohol
    or drugs.
  • Alcohol and drugs can impair judgment making
    people more likely to hurt themselves or others,
    to have trouble with the law, to do poorly at
    school or work and to have relationship trouble.

Sources University of North Carolina, Bowles
Center for Alcohol Studies. http//www.med.unc.edu
/alcohol/prevention/effects.html Society for the
Study of Addiction, Addiction, 2012
Source Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, Smoking and Tobacco Use 2012
5
Did you know?
  • Data on alcohol, tobacco and other drug use

6
Alcohol Use
  • Those who binge drink are actually responsible
    for most of the harm to our community.
  • 1 in 6 adults binge drink nationally.
  • Binge drinkers do so about 4 times a month.
  • The largest number of drinks per binge is an
    average of 8.

Binge Drinking 4 or more drinks per occasion
for women and 5 or more drinks per occasion for
men.
Sources Http//www.cdc.gov/Features/Alcoholic
Consumption/ http//www.cdc.gov/vitalsigns/BingeDr
inking/index.html http//www.michigantrafficcra
shfacts.org/
7
Who Pays for Binge Drinking?
  • 72 Employer
  • 28 Police Jails Health Care
  • Costs due to lost worker productivity account
    for 72 of the economic harm of alcohol use.
  • In Eaton County
  • Alcohols Economic Harm Costs
  • 79 million

Sources Http//www.cdc.gov/Features/Alcoholic
Consumption/ http//www.cdc.gov/vitalsigns/BingeDr
inking/index.html http//www.michigantrafficcra
shfacts.org/
8
Tobacco use on the rise?
In Eaton County, 30.5 of adults are current
smokers according to the 2008-2010 Eaton County
Behavioral Risk Factor Survey as compared to only
20.4 in 2006-2007 and 19.8 for state of
Michigan in 2009.
Number of Deaths Linked to Tobacco Use (2009)
9
Drug Use
  • Increasingly people are abusing drugs that are
    not traditional like misusing prescription
    opiates, amphetamines, synthetic and designer
    drugs.
  • In Michigan, data from 1999-2009 indicate that
    the unintentional drug poisoning death rate for
    opioid analgesics including oxycodone,
    hydrocodone, and methodone that are usually
    prescribed to reduce pain increased by 734.6
    during 1999-2009.

Source Bureau of Substance Abuse and Addiction
Services, Michigan Department of Community
Health. Prescription and Over-the-Counter Drug
Abuse Strategic Plan, 2012. http//www.michigan.go
v/documents/mdch/RxOTC_Drug_Abuse_Strategic_Plan_F
inal_389362_7.pdf
10
Are Illicit Drug Users in the Workforce?
  • According to the National Survey on Drug Use and
    Health, of the 19.9 million current illicit drug
    users aged 18 or older in 2011, 66 were
    employed either full or part time.
  • Illegal Misused Illicit Drug Use
  • OVER HALF of the people employed with substance
    abuse problems were employed full time in 2011.

Source 2011 National Survey on Drug Use and
Health
11
How does employee ATOD use affect the employer?
  • The effects of employee alcohol, tobacco and
    other drug use on the employer

12
How does ATOD affect employer health care costs?
  • Alcohol and Other Drugs
  • Tobacco
  • Greater Healthcare costs employees with alcohol
    problems are twice as high as those for other
    employees.
  • Increased Accidents People who abuse drugs or
    alcohol are three and one-half times more likely
    to be involved in a workplace accident, resulting
    in increased workers compensation and disability
    claims.
  • Greater disability costs Nonsmoking employees
    can receive benefits such as workers'
    compensation based upon their exposure to
    secondhand smoke in the workplace.
  • Businesses pay an average of 2,189 in workers'
    compensation costs for smokers, compared with
    176 for nonsmokers.
  • Increased health insurance and life insurance
    claims In the United States, the direct medical
    costs associated with smoking totaled
    approximately 75.5 billion (average 1997-2001),
    according to the CDC.

Sources MDCH, Division for Vital Records and
Health Statistics. 2009.Causes of Preventable
Death Barry County Residents and Causes of
Preventable Death Eaton County Residents.
National Business Group on Health.
www.businessgrouphealth.org/tobacco
Sources Schneider Institute for Health Policy,
Brandeis University, Substance Abuse, The
Nation's Number One Health Problem, Princeton,
NJ Robert Wood Johnson Foundation 2001. US
DHHS, SAMHSA, 1999 National Household Survey on
Drug Abuse, Rockville, MD US DHHS, 2000.
13
How does alcohol affect workplace productivity?
  • Reduced Productivity Employees with light and
    moderate alcohol use cause 60 of alcohol-related
    absenteeism, tardiness, and poor work quality.
    Productivity can be reduced at any level of
    dependence.
  • Employed relatives pay. More than half of working
    family members of alcoholics report that their
    own ability to function at work and at home was
    negatively impacted by their family member's
    drinking.
  • Absenteeism increases. Alcoholism is estimated to
    cost 500 million lost workdays annually.

Sources National Business Group on Health. An
Employers Guide to Workplace Substance Abuse
Strategies and Treatment Recommendations. 2009.
http//www.businessgrouphealth.org/pub/f3151957-23
54-d714-5191-c11a80a07294 U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services, Substance Abuse and
Mental Health Services Administration. 2008. 14
short employer cost savings briefs. 2008.
http//store.samhsa.gov/product/14-Short-Employer-
Cost-Savings-Briefs/SMA08-4350
14
How does employee drug use affect workplace
productivity?
  • Reduced productivity and tardiness Studies have
    shown that substance-abusing employees function
    at about two thirds of their capability and that
    employees who use drugs are three times more
    likely to be late for work.
  • Turnover increases Individuals who are current
    illicit drug users are more than twice as likely
    (12.3 percent) as those who are not (5.1 percent)
    to have changed have changed employers three or
    more times in the past year.

Sources U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services, Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration. Drugs in the workplace
what an employer needs to know.
http//www.safeguardcertify.com/pdf/dt/SAMSA_Drugs
_workplace508.pdf S.L. Larson, J. Eyerman, M.S.
Foster, and J.C. Gfroerer, Worker Substance Use
and Workplace Policies and Programs. Rockville,
MD SAMHSA, OAS, 2007. http//www.oas.samhsa.gov/w
ork2k7/
15
How does tobacco use affect workplace
productivity?
  • RATES OF ABSENTEEISM
  • Research has shown that smokers take almost 8
    days more of sick leave compared to employees who
    do not smoke.
  • PRODUCTION TIME
  • Tobacco use leads to a loss of productivity more
    than alcohol consumption, family emergencies, age
    or education, according to a national study of
    American Productivity Audit data of the U.S.
    workforce.
  • Lost productivity costs are about 4,430 per year
    for current smokers compared to 3,246 per year
    for former smokers and 2,623 per year for
    non-smokers.

Source Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, Save Lives, Save Money Make Your
Business Smoke-Free, June 2006
16
How Employers Can Help
  • Education, workplace-based programs and policies

17
You Can Make an Impact
  • Did you know that
  • Savings to employers from investing in substance
    abuse treatment can exceed costs by a ratio of 12
    to 1.
  • Substance abuse treatment improves work
    performance and productivity while reducing
    interpersonal conflicts, job turnover, drug- and
    alcohol-related accidents and insurance costs.

Sources National Institute on Drug Abuse,
Principles of Drug Addiction Treatment A
Research-Based Guide, FAQ11, Bethesda, MD,
1999. SAMHSA, Center for Substance Abuse
Treatment, Substance Abuse in Brief Effective
Treatment Saves Money, Rockville, MD SAMHSA
CSAT, January, 1999.
18
Benefits of Creating a Workplace Substance Abuse
Policy
  • By promoting substance abuse education and
  • access to treatment in the workplace, employers
  • can realize many money-saving benefits
  • Reduced absenteeism and job turnover
  • Improved worker productivity and job performance
  • Reduced healthcare costs and
  • Fewer workplace accidents and disability claims

Source SAMHSA, CSAT, Substance Abuse in Brief
Effective Treatment Saves Money, Rockville, MD
SAMHSA CSAT, January, 1999.
19
Benefits of a Tobacco-Free Worksite Policy
  • For Employees
  • For Employers
  • A tobacco-free environment helps create a safe,
    healthful workplace
  • Shows the company cares
  • Workers who are bothered by tobacco will not be
    exposed to it at the worksite
  • Tobacco users appreciate a clear company policy
    about smoking or using smokeless tobacco at work.
  • Managers are relieved when a process for dealing
    with tobacco in the workplace is clearly defined
  • Reduced direct health care costs
  • Reduced maintenance costs
  • It may be possible to negotiate lower health,
    life, and disability coverage because employee
    tobacco use is reduced
  • Increased productivity

Source American Cancer Society. Tobacco free
Workplace Toolkit, 2011. http//www.cancer.org/ac
s/groups/content/_at_healthpromotions/documents/docum
ent/acspc-026485.pdf
20
Employer Steps to Reducing Tobacco Use
  • Your company can help lower the number of tobacco
    deaths and save lives from cancer by
  • Promoting the importance of quitting and avoiding
    tobacco products.
  • Establishing workplace-based tobacco cessation
    programs/services.
  • Offer programs and services that will educate
    employees about the steps they can take to quit
    using tobacco.
  • Adopting a long-term plan to implement a
    smoke-free workplace policy.
  • Research shows that when employers implement a
    smoke-free policy, smokers are more likely to
    quit smoking, which can help them stay well.

Source American Cancer Society. Tobacco free
Workplace Toolkit, 2011. http//www.cancer.org/ac
s/groups/content/_at_healthpromotions/documents/docum
ent/acspc-026485.pdf
21
Employer Steps to Reducing Substance Abuse and
Overuse
  • Initiate an Employee Assistance Program that
    includes confidential substance abuse screening,
    education, treatment referral, and recovery
    support.
  • Develop a policy for dealing with substance abuse
    in the workplace at a minimum, provide training
    for supervisors in recognizing and dealing with
    drug or alcohol problems and support treatment
    for and recovery from substance use disorders.
  • Offer employees health insurance that provides
    comprehensive benefits for substance abuse
    treatment, including a broad range of service
    options, such as therapy, medications, and
    recovery support.
  • Be sure that health plans require their
    physicians to screen patients confidentially for
    substance use problems.

22
Support for you to get started
  • Substance Free Workplace Toolkits
  • SAMHSAs Making Your Workplace Drug-Free A Kit
    for Employers
  • http//store.samhsa.gov/shin/content//SMA07-4230/
    SMA07-4230.pdf
  • An Employers Guide to Workplace Substance Abuse
    Strategies and Treatment Recommendations
  • http//www.businessgrouphealth.org/pub/f3151957-2
    354-d714-5191-c11a80a07294
  • Tobacco-Free Workplace Tool Kits
  • Implementing a Tobacco-Free Campus Initiative in
    Your Workplace http//www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/dnpao/hw
    i/toolkits/tobacco/index.htm
  • The American Cancer Society- Tobacco-Free
    Workplace Tool Kit http//www.cancer.org/acs/group
    s/content/_at_healthpromotions/documents/document/acs
    pc-026485.pdf
  • Contact an ECSAAG representative to help you get
    started with your ATOD workplace policies Sara
    Lurie, 517-541-8711 or slurie_at_eatonresa.org
  • For more information on tobacco-free workplace
    policies contact Tamah Gustafson,
  • 517-541-2624 or tgustafson_at_bedhd.org
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