Medtronic introduced a global well-being programme last year in a bid to help its employees deal with damaging health issues ranging from obesity and stress to smoking.
As a manufacturer of pacemakers, defibrillators and other medical equipment, the vendor knows the value of good health and has long been committed to improving the wellbeing of its workforce, not least to try and cut absenteeism rates and improve productivity.
Integral to the scheme is a dedicated website where employees register and complete a 15-minute well-being and health risk assessment based on vielife’s Online software.
Based on the answers given, each person then receives a wellbeing score ranging from one to 100. Those identified as being in a high-risk group – people who are at risk of diabetes, for example – are offered individual coaching.
The initiative builds upon an existing “Total Health” programme, introduced in 2006 at the firm’s US headquarters, which has so far produced some impressive results.
“We’re a global company and our programmes and initiatives need to be as equal as they can,” Barron explains.
The supplier estimates that the scheme has so far saved it more than $4 million as it no longer has to deal with a range of costly health issues. But it also believes that the benefits are more than purely monetary.
When the programme was first introduced in the US, 50% of the total workforce registered to take part in the assessment, but that figure has now risen to 90%. Despite the impressive levels of take-up, however, Barron admits: “There’s always a level of scepticism with anything new.”
And the high take-up rate can at least partly be attributed to the fact that Medtronic offers incentives to encourage people to get involved. Participation has, in fact, been tied to its health insurance offer, which means that those employees who complete the programme pay less for their cover.
Nonetheless, of the 11 countries, including the UK, in which the wellbeing programme was rolled out without any major incentives being provided, 48% of the workforce still chose to register and some 34% completed the survey.
Results from US wellbeing programme, introduced in 2006:
- Incidence of low-risk problems fallen by 20% to 85%
- High-risk problems reduced from 5% of the total to 3%
- 66% of people who worked with a coach eliminated at least one key risk such as smoking
- While some 5% of the US workforce still smoke, the overall figure has dropped by 15%.