Strategies for Worksite Health Interventions to Employees with Elevated Risk of Chronic Diseases

Chronic disease rates have become more prevalent in the modern American workforce, which has negative implications for workplace productivity and healthcare costs. Offering workplace health interventions is recognized as an effective strategy to reduce chronic disease progression, absenteeism, and h...

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Main Authors: Lu Meng, Marilyn B. Wolff, Kelly A. Mattick, David M. DeJoy, Mark G. Wilson, Matthew Lee Smith
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2017-06-01
Series:Safety and Health at Work
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2093791116302955
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spelling doaj-045faab2389a40c0b70b8d43ed119c822020-11-24T23:04:56ZengElsevierSafety and Health at Work2093-79112017-06-018211712910.1016/j.shaw.2016.11.004Strategies for Worksite Health Interventions to Employees with Elevated Risk of Chronic DiseasesLu Meng0Marilyn B. Wolff1Kelly A. Mattick2David M. DeJoy3Mark G. Wilson4Matthew Lee Smith5Workplace Health Group, Department of Health Promotion and Behavior, College of Public Health, The University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USAWorkplace Health Group, Department of Health Promotion and Behavior, College of Public Health, The University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USAWorkplace Health Group, Department of Health Promotion and Behavior, College of Public Health, The University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USAWorkplace Health Group, Department of Health Promotion and Behavior, College of Public Health, The University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USAWorkplace Health Group, Department of Health Promotion and Behavior, College of Public Health, The University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USAWorkplace Health Group, Department of Health Promotion and Behavior, College of Public Health, The University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USAChronic disease rates have become more prevalent in the modern American workforce, which has negative implications for workplace productivity and healthcare costs. Offering workplace health interventions is recognized as an effective strategy to reduce chronic disease progression, absenteeism, and healthcare costs as well as improve population health. This review documents intervention and evaluation strategies used for health promotion programs delivered in workplaces. Using predetermined search terms in five online databases, we identified 1,131 published items from 1995 to 2014. Of these items, 27 peer-reviewed articles met the inclusion criteria; reporting data from completed United States-based workplace interventions that recruited at-risk employees based on their disease or disease-related risk factors. A content rubric was developed and used to catalogue these 27 published field studies. Selected workplace interventions targeted obesity (n = 13), cardiovascular diseases (n = 8), and diabetes (n = 6). Intervention strategies included instructional education/counseling (n = 20), workplace environmental change (n = 6), physical activity (n = 10), use of technology (n = 10), and incentives (n = 13). Self-reported data (n = 21), anthropometric measurements (n = 17), and laboratory tests (n = 14) were used most often in studies with outcome evaluation. This is the first literature review to focus on interventions for employees with elevated risk for chronic diseases. The review has the potential to inform future workplace health interventions by presenting strategies related to implementation and evaluation strategies in workplace settings. These strategies can help determine optimal worksite health programs based on the unique characteristics of work settings and the health risk factors of their employee populations.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2093791116302955chronic diseaseemployee healthhealth interventionintervention strategiesworksite
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lu Meng
Marilyn B. Wolff
Kelly A. Mattick
David M. DeJoy
Mark G. Wilson
Matthew Lee Smith
spellingShingle Lu Meng
Marilyn B. Wolff
Kelly A. Mattick
David M. DeJoy
Mark G. Wilson
Matthew Lee Smith
Strategies for Worksite Health Interventions to Employees with Elevated Risk of Chronic Diseases
Safety and Health at Work
chronic disease
employee health
health intervention
intervention strategies
worksite
author_facet Lu Meng
Marilyn B. Wolff
Kelly A. Mattick
David M. DeJoy
Mark G. Wilson
Matthew Lee Smith
author_sort Lu Meng
title Strategies for Worksite Health Interventions to Employees with Elevated Risk of Chronic Diseases
title_short Strategies for Worksite Health Interventions to Employees with Elevated Risk of Chronic Diseases
title_full Strategies for Worksite Health Interventions to Employees with Elevated Risk of Chronic Diseases
title_fullStr Strategies for Worksite Health Interventions to Employees with Elevated Risk of Chronic Diseases
title_full_unstemmed Strategies for Worksite Health Interventions to Employees with Elevated Risk of Chronic Diseases
title_sort strategies for worksite health interventions to employees with elevated risk of chronic diseases
publisher Elsevier
series Safety and Health at Work
issn 2093-7911
publishDate 2017-06-01
description Chronic disease rates have become more prevalent in the modern American workforce, which has negative implications for workplace productivity and healthcare costs. Offering workplace health interventions is recognized as an effective strategy to reduce chronic disease progression, absenteeism, and healthcare costs as well as improve population health. This review documents intervention and evaluation strategies used for health promotion programs delivered in workplaces. Using predetermined search terms in five online databases, we identified 1,131 published items from 1995 to 2014. Of these items, 27 peer-reviewed articles met the inclusion criteria; reporting data from completed United States-based workplace interventions that recruited at-risk employees based on their disease or disease-related risk factors. A content rubric was developed and used to catalogue these 27 published field studies. Selected workplace interventions targeted obesity (n = 13), cardiovascular diseases (n = 8), and diabetes (n = 6). Intervention strategies included instructional education/counseling (n = 20), workplace environmental change (n = 6), physical activity (n = 10), use of technology (n = 10), and incentives (n = 13). Self-reported data (n = 21), anthropometric measurements (n = 17), and laboratory tests (n = 14) were used most often in studies with outcome evaluation. This is the first literature review to focus on interventions for employees with elevated risk for chronic diseases. The review has the potential to inform future workplace health interventions by presenting strategies related to implementation and evaluation strategies in workplace settings. These strategies can help determine optimal worksite health programs based on the unique characteristics of work settings and the health risk factors of their employee populations.
topic chronic disease
employee health
health intervention
intervention strategies
worksite
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2093791116302955
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