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Is Your Wellness Program Worth Its Weight In Dollars?(Published August 4, 2008)
You cleared the first hurdle — executives agreed to implement a wellness program. Now they are asking for hard evidence that the company's financial investment in the program is paying off. Such a request trips up many HR professionals because there is no single way to measure a wellness program's return on investment (ROI). Not only that, but changing participation rates, health plan design shifts, and employee turnover can skew the validity of ROI measures.
If measuring your program's ROI seems akin to scaling Mount Everest, take comfort in the fact that more and more employers are successfully making the climb. According to a survey of 225 employers by Health2 Resources, more than one-quarter of those employers offering a wellness program have successfully measured their ROI, up from 14% in 2007. Of those that calculate ROI, 83% said they more than broke even, compared to 66% in 2007.
Ron Z. Goetzel, Ph.D., research professor and director of the Institute for Health Productivity Studies at the Rollins School of Public Health at Emory University, estimates that for every dollar invested in a wellness program, employers can expect to save between $1.50 and $3.
To determine how much money your organization is saving, first determine the questions you (or, more accurately, top executives) want answered. Next, identify the data necessary to answer these questions. Then, develop a data collection process that will allow you to gather necessary information. Finally, determine how to analyze the data.
When it comes to collecting and assessing data, the National Wellness Institute identified three areas of economic returns to consider.
Learn how to keep the dollars you are saving from being spent defending your company's wellness program in court by attending AHI's Reducing Health Care Costs Without Crossing The Legal Line: Wellness Programs & Other Cost Cutting Strategies webinar on August 13, which will explore, among many others things, how to establish programs that are legally compliant.
Related Topic(s): Safety & Health, Benefits |
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