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Poll of Business Executives Shows Most Companies Not Aware of True Costs of Healthcare
- Nearly 74 percent of respondents polled during an online webinar said medical and pharmacy expenses were the largest cost drivers for their business
- 75 percent of same respondents said saving money was the No. 1 goal of their health improvement programs
- Research published in the Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine presents a new view - that lost productivity is costing the nation's employers more than twice as much as direct medical costs
Presenting the research was
Some 180 of the nation's top employers, health plans and benefit consulting firms learned about the study and other key facts while participating in "The Business Case for Better Health" webinar hosted by SourceMedia, publishers of Employee Benefits News and Employee Benefit Adviser. Nearly 74 percent of webinar participants who responded to the poll stated that pharmacy and medical expenses were the top cost drivers for their healthcare benefit programs, while 75 percent noted that the primary reason they offered health improvement programs was to save money.
"We need to find ways to encourage employers to look beyond just medical and pharmacy costs," noted Dr. Loeppke, who has also conducted a number of other studies on the impact of health on productivity. "We need to look at the burden of chronic illness as well as the health risks as precursors to chronic conditions and how that relates back to health-related productivity loss (presenteeism and absenteeism) - those are key factors that are eating into employers' profitability."
Loeppke and the other presenters - including
Prevention, health improvement and evidence-based treatment can make significant reductions to the economic burden of illness in America, according to Dr. Loeppke. In fact, he says, the Milken Institute has shown that compared to current trends, by 2023 with plausible improvements in preventing and treating chronic conditions, the U.S. could:
- Avoid 40 million cases of chronic disease
- Decrease treatment costs by
$218 billion per year - Reduce the economic impact of disease by 27 percent, or
$1.1 trillion annually - Increase the nation's GDP by
$905 billion through productivity gains
Identifying the true cost drivers and the value of productivity enables employers to create more targeted and meaningful benefit programs, according to presenters. More importantly, they said, such information helps to demonstrate the business value of a healthier workforce and sell the value of health and wellness programs to top executives.
For additional information or to view and listen to the webinar, go to http://eba.benefitnews.com/blog/bythenumbers/-2681123-1.html
To order a hard copy reprint of Dr. Loeppke's study, email alerenews@alere.com. Please include your name, title, organization, address and phone number.
About Alere
Alere(R) (www.alere.com) is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Inverness Medical Innovations, Inc. (www.invernessmedical.com) (NYSE: IMA). Alere, a Latin verb, meaning "to care for" or "to support," offers the most patient-centered health management services available from a single provider in the industry. Alere services provide health interventions that are designed for the entire lifespan from pre-cradle (high-risk pregnancy and NICU management) to end-of-life care (complex care) as well as the continuum of health from wellness (health and productivity programs) and prevention to total health management of the individual for those having various chronic illnesses.
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