Got some interesting material from the Harvard University Website. For idiot hypothyroids, lemme tell you that Harvard University is the BEST UNIVERSITY regarding Health Sciences in the whole world. It has pioneered Original Research in Medical Sciences and its Public Health School is the 2nd best in USA after John Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
A Massachusetts man lost his job at a Scotts Miracle-Gro lawn and garden center in 2006 when a routine drug test came back positive. The finding: nicotine. Company leaders were cracking down on smoking and other unhealthy behaviors they saw as bad for the bottom line.
That same program saved another Scotts employee’s life. In this case, the worker—following the advice of a company-paid health coach—had some medical tests done and discovered that he was likely just days away from a massive heart attack. Two stents inserted into
his coronary arteries saved him from a life-threatening blockage. These are just two examples of how U.S. employers are dangling “carrots” and swinging “sticks” to prod workers to change their behavior and better their health. Companies have long had an interest in keeping workers healthy, productive, and satisfied while cutting health-care and insurance costs. Increasingly, though, they are using incentives—and disincentives—to rein in these costs’ runaway growth.
So far, tobacco use and obesity are getting the most attention. To prompt workers to stop smoking and lose weight, employers are, among other things:
According to a 2008 national survey by Harris Interactive, 91 percent of employers “believed they could reduce their health care costs by influencing employees to adopt healthier lifestyles,” wrote two Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) experts in the July 10, 2008
issue of the New England Journal of Medicine. Michelle Mello, a professor of law and public health in the Department of Health Policy and Management, and colleague Meredith B. Rosenthal, an HSPH associate professor of health economics and health policy, spelled out the legal parameters of employer-sponsored wellness programs as they stand today.
According to surveys cited by Mello and Rosenthal, 19 percent of employers with 500 or more employees offered wellness programs as of 2006. Almost 40 percent said they planned to offer monetary rewards for healthy behaviors within two years.
BY THE RULES
Employee wellness programs have been around for decades. But one likely impetus for these programs to offer a new round of health incentives was the issuing, in December of 2006, of final rules on group health plans under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act
(HIPAA). These rules reduced the uncertainty about what was legally permissible, which was probably holding some insurers back from moving in this direction, Mello says.
Among other things, HIPAA limits the value of incentives that group health plans can offer to less than 20 percent of the total cost of health insurance (meaning premiums paid by both employer and employee). This rule allows for up to $2,420 for a family insurance policy costing $12,100 a year. HIPAA rules also distinguish between incentives based on participation in a program and incentives based on achieving certain health standards, such as quitting smoking or attaining a healthier weight as reflected by the body mass index (BMI).*
There are caveats, however. “If the reward is tied to achieving a health standard but there’s no alternative standard available to people who can’t reasonably be expected to meet that standard, it would violate HIPAA,” Mello notes.
Assume, then, by way of example, that “Company X” requires its employees to be nonsmokers and have a BMI under 30. The company’s rationale, backed by the medical literature, would be that (a) people who smoke are more likely to develop heart disease, lung cancer, and other costly and debilitating diseases and (b) those with a higher BMI are likely to develop these as well as other problems, such as diabetes, all of which could erode their productivity and ratchet up their and the company’s health care costs. HIPAA might allow the incentive to help slightly obese workers reach a BMI under 30;however, the law would also require that morbidly obese workers receive the same incentive to meet a less drastic and more realistic target BMI.
All of this is perfectly legal, as long as group health plans abide by HIPAA and insurers and employers abide by the Americans with Disabilities Act, plus other applicable federal and state laws. “It’s rare for courts to find that obesity constitutes a disability under the Americans with Disabilities Act,” Mello says. “Courts have also consistently found that nicotine or tobacco use does not constitute a ‘disability.’” She and Rosenthal point out, however, some courts have ruled “morbid obesity” to be an “impairment” if it can be linked to a “physiological cause.”
Still other federal laws governing health incentive plans include civil rights laws, pay and age discrimination laws, the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), and the tax code. State laws may also limit a company’s ability to impose health standards. Several states have statutes that explicitly disallow hiring or firing workers based on their tobacco use.
A Massachusetts man lost his job at a Scotts Miracle-Gro lawn and garden center in 2006 when a routine drug test came back positive. The finding: nicotine. Company leaders were cracking down on smoking and other unhealthy behaviors they saw as bad for the bottom line.
That same program saved another Scotts employee’s life. In this case, the worker—following the advice of a company-paid health coach—had some medical tests done and discovered that he was likely just days away from a massive heart attack. Two stents inserted into
his coronary arteries saved him from a life-threatening blockage. These are just two examples of how U.S. employers are dangling “carrots” and swinging “sticks” to prod workers to change their behavior and better their health. Companies have long had an interest in keeping workers healthy, productive, and satisfied while cutting health-care and insurance costs. Increasingly, though, they are using incentives—and disincentives—to rein in these costs’ runaway growth.
So far, tobacco use and obesity are getting the most attention. To prompt workers to stop smoking and lose weight, employers are, among other things:
- adopting no-tobacco policies on and off the job
- offering cash-incentive payments and gift cards
- reimbursing workers for gym memberships
- providing free health coaching
- offering insurance-premium discounts to those who meet health standards—and surcharges to those who don’t
According to a 2008 national survey by Harris Interactive, 91 percent of employers “believed they could reduce their health care costs by influencing employees to adopt healthier lifestyles,” wrote two Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) experts in the July 10, 2008
issue of the New England Journal of Medicine. Michelle Mello, a professor of law and public health in the Department of Health Policy and Management, and colleague Meredith B. Rosenthal, an HSPH associate professor of health economics and health policy, spelled out the legal parameters of employer-sponsored wellness programs as they stand today.
According to surveys cited by Mello and Rosenthal, 19 percent of employers with 500 or more employees offered wellness programs as of 2006. Almost 40 percent said they planned to offer monetary rewards for healthy behaviors within two years.
BY THE RULES
Employee wellness programs have been around for decades. But one likely impetus for these programs to offer a new round of health incentives was the issuing, in December of 2006, of final rules on group health plans under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act
(HIPAA). These rules reduced the uncertainty about what was legally permissible, which was probably holding some insurers back from moving in this direction, Mello says.
Among other things, HIPAA limits the value of incentives that group health plans can offer to less than 20 percent of the total cost of health insurance (meaning premiums paid by both employer and employee). This rule allows for up to $2,420 for a family insurance policy costing $12,100 a year. HIPAA rules also distinguish between incentives based on participation in a program and incentives based on achieving certain health standards, such as quitting smoking or attaining a healthier weight as reflected by the body mass index (BMI).*
There are caveats, however. “If the reward is tied to achieving a health standard but there’s no alternative standard available to people who can’t reasonably be expected to meet that standard, it would violate HIPAA,” Mello notes.
Assume, then, by way of example, that “Company X” requires its employees to be nonsmokers and have a BMI under 30. The company’s rationale, backed by the medical literature, would be that (a) people who smoke are more likely to develop heart disease, lung cancer, and other costly and debilitating diseases and (b) those with a higher BMI are likely to develop these as well as other problems, such as diabetes, all of which could erode their productivity and ratchet up their and the company’s health care costs. HIPAA might allow the incentive to help slightly obese workers reach a BMI under 30;however, the law would also require that morbidly obese workers receive the same incentive to meet a less drastic and more realistic target BMI.
All of this is perfectly legal, as long as group health plans abide by HIPAA and insurers and employers abide by the Americans with Disabilities Act, plus other applicable federal and state laws. “It’s rare for courts to find that obesity constitutes a disability under the Americans with Disabilities Act,” Mello says. “Courts have also consistently found that nicotine or tobacco use does not constitute a ‘disability.’” She and Rosenthal point out, however, some courts have ruled “morbid obesity” to be an “impairment” if it can be linked to a “physiological cause.”
Still other federal laws governing health incentive plans include civil rights laws, pay and age discrimination laws, the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), and the tax code. State laws may also limit a company’s ability to impose health standards. Several states have statutes that explicitly disallow hiring or firing workers based on their tobacco use.
IBM: Carrots Only | Alabama: Targeting Highest-Risk Workers | Scotts Miracle-Gro Gets Down to Detail |
IBM offers employees up to two $150 payments a year if they complete Internet-based assessments organized around healthy eating, exercise,overall health, and children’s health. To earn payments, employees must meet specific requirements such as weight loss, diet change, or attainment of physical fitness goals, with each option. Carrots Healthy Eating Option: food tracking, meal planning, goal setting Physical Activity Option: walking, running, swimming, aerobics Preventive Care Option: preventive care recommendations and maintenance of personal health records Children’s Health Rebate: educational resources for employees to establish healthy eating and exercise routines for their children New Hire Rebate: new employees complete an online health assessment and visit Web-based health resource | Starting in January 2010, the state of Alabama will charge current employees a $50-a-month health insurance premium (no premium is charged now, except for tobacco users). Incentives will kick in for employees who choose to participate. Carrots $25 premium discount to employees who don’t use tobacco $25 “wellness premium discount” for employees who meet standards for blood pressure, cholesterol, glucose, and BMI Anyone whose results fall outside certain boundaries receives a voucher that covers the co-payment for a doctor’s visit. Beginning in 2011, employees can receive the discount if they have shown that they are within set boundaries, or are taking steps to get healthier. Sticks $25 monthly premium for tobacco users rises to $50 in 2011 No wellness premium discount for employees who don’t take health risk assessments and/or steps to reduce their health risks | Scotts uses both incentives and disincentives. They include: Carrots $10 monthly fitness center membership fee, reimbursable after 120 uses of the center Free health coaching Free medical services for employees and covered dependents Free prescriptions for generic drugs Sticks Scotts offers a voluntary health-risk appraisal called Health Quotient. Employees who choose not to participate pay a $40-per-month insurance premium surcharge. If an employee takes the appraisal and is in the mid- to high-tier range of risk levels, he or she can opt to consult a health coach and take steps to lower risks. However, if that employee chooses to do nothing, he or she will pay a $67 insurance premium surcharge per month. |
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