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Managing workforce health and well-being must be a top priority

Employee health is integral to business health. Firms must develop strategies to protect their workforce’s physical, social, mental, and financial well-being.
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Why managing the health and well-being of their workforce must be a top priority for businesses

The health of employees is integral to the health of a business, so firms must step up and manage their people risks. This means building new strategies that protect their workforce’s physical, social, mental, and financial well-being.

The health and well-being of your employees determines the health and resilience of your business, something that has been clearly demonstrated over the past 12 months.

Pre-pandemic, we were already facing multiple health crises particularly relating to chronic conditions driven by lifestyle choices and an ageing population. 

The collateral health impact from the spread of COVID-19 continues to have devastating consequences – both physically and mentally. The extended duration has exacerbated mental health concerns, with businesses and employees alike feeling the impact of anxiety and loneliness, the juggling of caregiving duties, financial stressors, and, sadly, grief. 

Employers that proactively mitigate health issues – including all aspects of well-being – through targeted interventions and culture can drive positive business outcomes. 

The benefits of this approach include a more stable business, more productive and loyal employees, and better management of medical, disability, and workers’ compensation claims. Workers report that the more varied health and well-being resources an employer offers, the more energized and supported they feel, and the less likely they are to leave. 

There’s a clear link between employee health and business continuity and thus the spread of infectious diseases, including future pandemics, is a critical threat for consideration. In fact, it featured as the highest impact risk of the next decade in this year’s Global Risks Report. 

Occupational health is more important than ever before, but firms must also consider other aspects of health, and the issues faced by the organization when the physical, social, mental, and financial well-being of their employees is not looked after. These include:

  • Deteriorating mental health: Workforce mental health issues (e.g., anxiety, stress, depression, and addiction) leading to suboptimal well-being, productivity, benefits spend, and weakened employment value proposition and/or brand. 
  • Workforce exhaustion: Overtiredness stemming from work-life balance issues, change fatigue, and too many priorities and distractions leading to errors, high employee turnover, reduced productivity, and damaged reputation. Remote work especially is blurring the lines between one’s work life and personal life.
  • Non-communicable health conditions: Unmanaged chronic illnesses including diabetes, lung disease, and cancer impacting business continuity and operational cost escalation and overall individual and organizational performance. 
  • Communicable health conditions: Spread of infectious diseases, including future pandemics, impacting business continuity and operational cost escalation and overall performance.
  • Work-related illness or injury: Accidents, unsafe exposures, security incidents, or aggravation of pre-existing conditions in a work environment, whether on-site or remote. With increasing work from home, this can also include incidents in the “home-office” environment.

What firms can do

The silver lining is that the pandemic has triggered a greater shift and adoption of digital healthcare, which is promising as these innovations look to make healthcare more affordable and easily accessible. For example, there are 400,000 health apps out there, and these can even be embedded in an insurer’s medical, workers’ compensation, or disability/salary continuance plans.

Firms should also design their health and well-being strategy by taking a data-driven approach to identify their top health risks, thereby enabling them to determine the targeted interventions needed to mitigate the risks. 

This enables businesses to develop short, medium, and long-term approaches to creating affordable and competitive benefit plans that meet business and workforce needs. 

Good questions to ask

  • Has your C-suite’s interest in employee well-being risen during the pandemic?
  • Mental illness short-term disabilities are one of the fastest growing areas of short-term disability claims. How are you managing these?
  • How are you equipping your managers and HR professionals to handle employee health and well-being issues?
  • Do you see opportunity to better integrate your occupational and non-occupational health strategies?
  • Do you manage mental health the same way that you do physical health?

Conclusion

The future of work demands healthy and engaged employees, so now is the time for employers to consider proactively implementing plan management measures. Fortunately, 95% of employers believe investment in health and well-being will be the same or greater priority in the future. 

Even prior to the pandemic, the number one reason provided by senior decision makers for investing in health and well-being was safety, followed by morale/engagement and improved productivity. So, developing a comprehensive health and well-being strategy should be initiated by the C-suite and involve human resources, ESG, occupational health and safety, risk management, operations, and marketing/communications. 

Employers cannot afford to do nothing! It is critical that health is made a business imperative. Firms need to plan ahead for the design, delivery, and financing of solutions that enhance access to quality healthcare, prevention, and culture of health programs.