1. Measuring Participation in Employer-Sponsored Health and Well-Being Programs: A Participation Index and Its Association With Health Risk Change.
- Author
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Seaverson, Erin L. D., Gingerich, Stefan B., Mangen, David J., and Anderson, David R.
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HEALTH programs , *HEALTH risk assessment , *INDUSTRIAL hygiene , *PARTICIPATION - Abstract
Purpose: To develop an index of participation in workplace health and well-being programs and assess its relationship with health risk status.Design: Study design comprised a retrospective longitudinal analysis of employee health risk assessment (HRA) and program participation data.Setting: Data from 6 companies that implemented health and well-being programs from 2014 to 2016.Participants: Employee participants (n = 95 318) from 6 companies who completed an HRA in 2014 to 2016. After matching those who completed the HRA in all 3 years, the longitudinal file included 38 789 respondents.Measures: Participation indicators were created for 9 different program components. The sum of these 9 components established the total participation index.Analysis: Descriptive and correlation analyses were conducted on all participation measures. Repeated-measures analysis of variance was used to assess the impact of participation level on health risk over time.Results: Higher levels of participation were associated with a greater reduction in risks, with each participation dose yielding a reduction of 0.038 risks (P < .001).Conclusion: Results suggest that employees who participate more in workplace health and well-being programs experience more health risk improvement. The study also supports a more granular definition of participation based on the number of interactions and type of program. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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