Archive for category Commentary
Deconstructing the ShapeUp Survey’s Findings about Incentives
Posted by Bob M. in Commentary, ShapeUp, Uncategorized on March 14, 2012
According to the ShapeUp Employer Wellness Survey, the average per employee per year incentive is $375.
I’ll take a pass, for now, on discussing the role of incentives in motivating behavior change. That topic is being well covered in all corners of the wellness world.
Let’s take a look at this number, $375. While ShapeUp wrote in its blog, and its webinar debate, that this is the average per employee per year (PEPY) incentive, I suspect that they were being more precise when they stated in their survey results that $375 was Read the rest of this entry »
Engagement vs Participation: Shaping Up or Just Showing Up?
Posted by Bob M. in Commentary, Employee Wellness Programs, ShapeUp, Uncategorized on March 12, 2012
Employers cited increased “engagement” as their number one priority when designing wellness offerings, according to ShapeUp’s Employer Wellness Survey. And in their webinar, “Debating the Results of Our Wellness Survey,” ShapeUp noted that respondents had used the terms “engagement” and “participation” interchangeably. Throughout the webinar, ShapeUp chose to follow suit.
For me, this part of the webinar was a roller-coaster ride. I was disappointed Read the rest of this entry »
Do Annual Physical Exams Improve Health Outcomes?
Posted by Bob M. in Commentary, Screenings, Uncategorized on March 10, 2012
In case you missed it, the most recent issue of the Annals of Internal Medicine included an important but disturbing editorial “What We Don’t Know Can Hurt Our Patients” (excerpt here). The editorial piggy-backed on an article describing a study showing that most physicians don’t understand screening statistics.
The discussion got me to thinking about an ongoing LinkedIn forum, to which I’ve previously referred, in which wellness managers are falling in lock-step in support of requiring annual physical exams.
Here, for what it’s worth, is another one of my contributions to that discussion:
According to the US Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, “the US Preventive Services Task Force [in the 2nd edition of its preventive guidelines] has rejected the traditional emphasis on a standardized annual physical examination as an effective tool for improving the health of patients. Instead, they emphasized that the content and the frequency of the periodic health exam needs to be tailored to the age, health risks and preferences of each patient.”
A good overview of the topic, representing both sides, is available on the website of the American College of Physicians.
It’s important to identify how best to motivate employees to be fully engaged in their health and wellness. But first we must, as clearly as possible, identify those behaviors that are truly helpful. As for “annual” preventive exams, the most positive thing you can say is that the jury is still out.
Zero in on a ShapeUp Obesity Study
Posted by Bob M. in Commentary, ShapeUp, Uncategorized on March 9, 2012
I’m stepping aside from the series about the ShapeUp Employer Wellness Survey results to take a knee-deep dive into the obesity study published in the journal Obesity in 2009.
Bottom line: ShapeUp met a standard for excellence by publishing, in a peer-reviewed journal, the positive outcomes generated by it’s social-based wellness platform. The study should be a key consideration for any prospective purchaser who seeks evidence-based solutions (and that should be all of us). But…while the study, despite some limitations, gives ShapeUp the grounds on which to argue, “Anyone serious about controlling behavior-driven health care costs in America would be wise to zero in on weight loss interventions,” those of us in the field should take pause before Read the rest of this entry »
Zeroing in on Weight Loss May Be a Bad Idea — The ShapeUp Survey, Pt 3
Posted by Bob M. in Commentary, Employee Wellness Programs, Reporting, ROI, ShapeUp, Uncategorized on March 8, 2012
In one of ShapeUp’s initial posts following the release of the results of its Annual Survey Large Employer Wellness Survey, they emphasized that obesity is a key driver of employer health care costs, and the survey results found that employers view addressing obesity as an important goal.
ShapeUp concluded:
Anyone serious about controlling behavior-driven health care costs in America would be wise to zero in on weight loss interventions aimed at large, self-insured companies.
Anyone?
In fact, employers who invest in weight management are likely to be doing so to excess. Read the rest of this entry »
Blogging about the ShapeUp Employer Wellness Survey: Why and How
Posted by Bob M. in Commentary, Employee Wellness Programs, ShapeUp, Uncategorized on March 5, 2012
(This post is second in a series. For the full series, click here).
I don’t want to use this series of blog posts to simply restate what ShapeUp has published on their own blog. If you are interested in the survey — and you should be — I direct your attention to Read the rest of this entry »
Should Employers Require or Even Encourage Annual Preventive Exams?
Posted by Bob M. in Commentary, Screenings, Uncategorized on March 4, 2012
A recent discussion on LinkedIn’s Wellness as a Business Strategy forum saw a lot of support for requiring annual physical exams, despite the medical community’s skepticism about whether annual physicals for apparently healthy, low-risk people are consistent with best practices and a healthy lifestyle. But the question should not be whether annual exams should be required — it’s whether they should Read the rest of this entry »
ShapeUp Shapes Up the Employee Wellness Debate
Posted by Bob M. in Commentary, Employee Wellness Programs, Reporting, ShapeUp, Uncategorized on March 3, 2012
I’m a fan of ShapeUp (formerly Shape Up the Nation), the employee wellness vendor that, in its own words, “combines social networking, social gaming, and financial incentives to make wellness fun, drive behavior change, and save companies money.”
While it seems ShapeUp has inched toward conformity by adopting (and adapting) a few conventional pieces of the employee wellness puzzle — like health risk appraisals and coaching — I still credit them with being a prominent vendor that challenges the status quo. And, in my humble opinion, few industries Read the rest of this entry »
Employee Wellness and Engagement
Posted by Bob M. in Commentary, Employee Wellness Programs, Uncategorized on March 3, 2012
Right Management and the World Economic Forum conducted in 2010 a compelling study on the relationship between employee wellness and employee engagement. Among the study’s findings:
“…When health and well-being are actively promoted:
- Organizations are seen by employees as 2.5 times more likely to be a best performer
- Organizations are seen as 3 times more likely to be productive Read the rest of this entry »


Wellness Budgets: ShapeUp Spotlights the One Percent
Posted by Bob M. in Commentary, Employee Wellness Programs, ROI, ShapeUp, Uncategorized on March 25, 2012
I nitpicked with ShapeUp for the way they used the term “per employee per year.” It’s only fair that I give them props for introducing a lot of people to one of the best ways to express total employee wellness budget: as a percentage of total health care expense.
In their survey results, ShapeUp reported, “Wellness budgets are typically 1-3% of total health care spend.” Elsewhere Read the rest of this entry »
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