At least one health insurer is practicing what it preaches. Blue Cross Blue Shield of Tennessee, confronted with evidence that more than half of its employees were obese, implemented an aggressive, incentive-laden wellness program aimed at helping workers become healthier.
It's the type of program that insurers such as Blue Cross have been encouraging businesses to adopt as a way to lower health care costs. Among the conventional measures that Blue Cross put in place at its campus in Chattanooga:
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Prohibited smoking on campus
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Opened an on-site fitness center and created walking trails around campus
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Offered healthier options in cafeteria
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Raised prices with a "sin tax" on burgers, fries and pizza
However, the company reports that perhaps the most effective idea was encouraging employees to walk more by giving them pedometers to track their steps. Workers were urged to walk between 5,000 and 10,000 steps a day.
Workers who met walking targets and other fitness goals were rewarded with up to $800 in cash, as well as more than $800 in health insurance premium rebates. These financial incentives, reports the company, helped motivate 60 percent of company employees to take part in the wellness program.
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The company claims that data gleaned from the walking program showed that those who were more active incurred significantly fewer health care costs.
Those classified as "moderate" exercisers, meaning they took between 5,000 and 10,000 steps a day, visited the emergency room 50 percent less than those who didn't exercise. The overall health care costs of moderate exercisers were 20 percent lower than those who didn't exercise.
Obese employees who partook in the program also appeared to be better off than those who didn't. Obese workers who took at least 5,000 steps had nearly 19 percent fewer hospital stays and incurred an average of $247 less in annual health care costs. than those who didn't.
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