Posted by Company Wellness | Posted in Company Wellness, Wellness Programs | Posted on 04-11-2010
In the near future, the federal government might offer help to companys looking to begin a health promotion program. The help would take the form of tax breaks to offset health promotion program costs.
A current U.S. Senate bill would give corporations a substantial tax break for beginning wellness programs. Dubbed the Healthy Workforce Act, it calls for an corporation tax credit of up to $200 per employee enrolled in a newly created wellness program.
For bigger firms, there’s the $200 credit for the first 200 personnel and up to $100 per worker thereafter. To qualify for the full credit, your health promotion program would have to feature –
health risk appraisals
staff member education drives (e.g., targeted mailings, online tools)
behavior change programs (e.g., tobacco use cessation, weight control, wellness Coaches), and
“meaningful” participation incentives (e.g., lower co-pays).
Certified companys would be able to claim the tax credit for up to 10 years after starting a wellness program.
The bill has enjoyed bipartisan support, but like many things in Washington, the parties disagree over how to fund the cost of the tax credit. As a result, it has been bogged down in committee.
When and when the bill is ratified, companys could claim the federal tax credit the following year.
In the meantime, whether or not your organization already has a formal health promotion program, there are proven ways to make wellness part of the organization culture. Best of all, they don’t have to cost an additional cent.
Health Promotion town meetings
It’s often said that successful health promotion programs start at the top of the company. Reason – Workers choose up fast on whether upper-level management practices what it preaches when it comes to wellness.
If the individuals in senior management are smokers, obese or simply reluctant to talk about health issues, it’s a tough sell to get staff engaged in taking control of their health.
That’s the idea behind the wellness town meeting.
Once a week (or once a month), everyone in the company attends a short meeting to discuss their own recent efforts to get healthier.
Managers typically go first, in order to break the ice about discussing some potentially sensitive issues like dieting or quitting use of tobacco.
In most companies, the meetings are arranged to encourage casual, free-flowing conversation.
One key – People speak from where they’re seated, rather than standing up front, with all eyes staring at them.
Some organizations take a more formal approach, which can also work. For example, at Old National Bank in Indiana, folks file into an auditorium to face their worst enemy, the scale.
Each week, everybody at the firm – from seasoned managers to the newest hires – comes in to get weighed. The only one who sees the number on the scale is the person getting weighed. Even so, the wellness program has inspired a lot of folks to lose weight.
Free tests and screenings
While there’s no substitute for having employees undergo comprehensive health risk appraisals, it’s also wise to home in on screening for common conditions that aren’t necessarily lifestyle related.
Example – skin cancer. It’s not just sun worshippers who are at risk of the most common (and in its early stages, treatable) form of cancer. Heredity plays a part. So does luck.
Fortunately, companys can get their employees screened for free. Through the American Academy of Dermatology’s National Melanoma and Skin Cancer Screening program, volunteer doctors perform skin cancer screenings at no cost.
In like fashion, other medical associations and public health agencies offer free or nominal-cost screenings for a variety of other common conditions.
