Posted by Employee Wellness | Posted in Employee Wellness Survey | Posted on 20-01-2009
Employee Health Promotion Programs: A Long-Term Committment
“Employee Health Promotion Programs” – what does that phrase mean to you? To many of us, it evokes an array of ambivalent thoughts — the health club membership we barely used, the nagging ankle injury from last year’s business picnic, the backaches, the bratwurst we had for lunch, the love handles and of course, the fad diets that failed us or that we failed. Usually, Employee Health Promotion Programs is a guilt trigger that causes us to feel remorse about our bodies and the health management we know we should be doing for them.
Unfortunately we live in a society where our survival is dependent on sitting at a desk, not hunting game, picking berries and sprinting away from wolves. We also live in such luxury, nutritionally, that we can gain weight steadily without being wealthy. Cardiovascular disease, obesity and bad nutrition cause most of the heath issues that weigh down staff member attendance and erode a organization’s productivity.
Ironically the poorest societies in the world – the ones furthest from the conveniences of modern life – often have the healthier, most physically hardy members. And as for the animal kingdom — don’t look there for commiseration. In the wild, it is extremely rare to find an animal that suffers from our kind of wellness issues.
Pharmaceutical dependency degrades Health and Wellness
It doesn’t help that United States citizens are descending into a deadly love affair with drugs — and drug testing won’t help you with these drugs.
For example, Greg Critser’s book Generation RX details how United States citizens spend about $180 billion dollars on Pharmaceuticals each year, with the estimated 2011 tally at a whopping $414 billion. The average number of Pharmaceuticals per American in 2004 stood at twelve.
Twelve! That means that your average staff member is taking 14, 18, or even more than 20 medications in an attempt to improve their Health and Wellness.
Is this effective, though? Critser is not convinced that the prescriptions help United States health. In fact, he points out a bevy of negative consequences for America’s legal drug addition, which include drug interactions, liver damage, and the legions of people who now depend on prescriptions to deal with ordinary trials and stresses.
An organization has the potential to improve Health
It’s not all bad news, though. Occupational Health Screenings and well-designed Employee Health Promotion Programs can help you fight the downward spiral for you and your workforce. In fact, good Employee Health Promotion Programs – like a strong walking Employee Health Promotion Programs initiative – can literally save lives and reduce the symptoms that cause employees to turn to prescriptions in the first place.
