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MaRS
Business of Aging Conference
        April 30, 2012
Agenda

Dr. Neil Gordon, Founder INTERVENT
     INTERVENT Overview
     Global vs Canadian
       Corporate Wellness / Disease Management Program Uptake
     Outcomes / Science

Dr. Dorian Lo, EVP, Pharmacy and Healthcare at Shoppers Drug Mart
    Case Study:
     Why Shoppers Drug Mart Implemented a Health / Wellness Program
     Shoppers Drug Mart Employee Program Overview
     Results
     Challenges

Conclusion
INTERVENT Founder

                 Founded INTERVENT in 1997
Dr. Neil Gordon  Used evidence-based research and clinicalled INTERVENT’s
                  nationally recognized organizations and
                                                             guidelines from
    Founder              national/international expansion
                        Past director of exercise physiology at the world renowned
                         Cooper Research Institute in Dallas, TX
                        Former clinical professor of medicine at the Emory
                         University School of Medicine in Atlanta, GA
                        Past Chairman of the American Heart Association
                         Committee on Exercise, Cardiac Rehabilitation and
                         Prevention
                        Devoted over 30 years to the prevention of cardiovascular
                         disease and other chronic illnesses
                        Published over 100 scientific manuscripts and 8 books on
                         prevention/disease management
INTERVENT Overview

 INTERVENT is a global lifestyle management
  and chronic disease risk reduction company
  based in Toronto, Canada and Savannah,
  GA, USA.
 INTERVENT develops, licenses and provides
  evidence-based programs for the prevention
  and management of multiple chronic
  diseases.
 Mission: To help significantly improve individual and
  population-based measures of health while simultaneously
  reducing health care costs and enhancing productivity
The Evolution of INTERVENT
 Programs originally based on research available in the
  early 1990s, especially the Stanford Coronary Risk
  Intervention Project (SCRIP).

 After completion of original research study in Dallas, TX,
  INTERVENT USA, Inc. was founded in 1997; INTERVENT
  Canada was subsequently launched in 2007.

 Since 1997, considerable time and effort has been spent
  developing, testing and successfully implementing
  INTERVENT’s evidence-based, technology-enabled,
  outcomes-oriented, comprehensive lifestyle management
  and chronic disease risk reduction programs.
A Treatment Platform that builds…

                  Risk                         Intervention                    Management
               Assessment                        Options                          Areas
                                                                            • Nutrition
                                                                            • Weight Management




                                                                                                     Evaluation and Follow-up
                                                 Self-help
                                                                            • Physical Activity
                                               Intervention
                                                                            • Stress Management
                                                  (web/mail)
                                                                            • Tobacco Cessation                                 Numerous
                                                                            • Diabetes
•Health Risk Assessment   •Stratification                                                                                       Program
                                                                            • High touch                                        Modules
                                                                            • Integrated with web-
                                                                             based program
                                                Health Coach
                                                                            • Formal, structured,
                                            Assisted Intervention            systematic approach
                                            (telephonic/web/on-site/mail)
                                                                            • Personalized support
Gamma-Dynacare Partnership
 Integrated Biometric Module
1st Level                                       2nd Level
                                                     of Stratification                               of Stratification
                                                  (Industry Standard)                                (INTERVENT)
                                                                                                          Lower
                                                         Lower Risk
                                                                                                        Intensity
                                                         0-2 Risk Factors
                                                                                                      Intervention
                                                                59%
                                                                                                           35%


                                                           Moderate                                     Moderate
                           Population                                                Individual         Intensity
  HRA                     stratification
                                                            Risk
                                                         3-4 Risk Factors           stratification    Intervention
                                                                32%                                        30%


                                                        Higher Risk                                      Higher
                                                         5 + Risk Factors                               Intensity
                                                                 9%                                   Intervention
                                                                                                           35%
Level 1 =     risk for future direct and indirect health care-related expenditure
             (“health risk stratification”);
Level 2 = intensity of lifestyle health coaching required to facilitate risk        Key:
             reduction in moderate/higher-risk individuals and to keep
apparently healthy individuals healthy (“intervention intensity                     BOB Data
stratification”)
Referrals to
            Allied Healthcare Providers

Consent to have EAP make an
       outbound call
Physician Summary Report




Partnering with C-CHANGE to ensure concordance with Canadian guidelines
Lifestyle Management Programs:
                                                       Key Steps
 Be sure that the Lifestyle Management Program that
  you select incorporates all of the following essential
  components:
  1. Identification of At-Risk Individuals
  2. Risk Factor Determination
  3. Goal Setting
  4. Action Plan Formulation (guideline-based)
  5. Action Plan Implementation
  6. Referrals to Allied Health Care Providers (MD; Pharmacist; CDE; EAP)
  7. Follow-up Evaluation and Progress Reports
  8. Compliance Enhancement/Tracking
  9. Aggregate Outcomes Assessment
  10. All of the above should all be evidence-based…
Coaching Methodology

                • Incorporates multiple behavior-change techniques: e.g., stages of
                    change, motivational interviewing, single concept learning theory
 Coaching       •   Educational kits, audios, eating and exercise diaries and on-line materials
Philosophy          support the foundation for behavioral change
                •   Comprehensive goals and action plan linked to health risk factors

                • Dedicated health coaches assigned to participants; pull in specialists
                    as needed
 Emotional
                •   Wellness Vision
  Support       •   Focus is on the individual

                • Evidence-based medicine approach
                • Formal, structured, systematic approach
Interventions   • Nature and intensity of intervention individualized based on
                    multiple factors, including risk status and readiness to change


  Progress      • System supports tracking of qualitative and quantitative results
                • Follow-up reports utilized during the program allow the participant to
  Tracking          track their progress along the way

                • Quality audits help ensure delivery of a high-quality program
  Quality       • Calls tracked and recorded
Better Health for Life℠
              16
Better Health for Life℠
              17
Interventions Driven by Hard
                                                Science (with documented outcomes)
Approximately 100 published scientific abstracts or manuscripts documenting benefits in terms
           of multiple risk factors, clinical variables, self-reported health status and ROI
   (Including numerous publications in peer-reviewed medical journals and independent third-
                                             party research)
                                       Key scientific manuscripts include:
  1.  Comparison of single versus multiple lifestyle interventions: Are the antihypertensive effects
      of exercise training and diet-induced weight loss additive? American Journal of Cardiology 1997;79:763-767
  2. Comprehensive cardiovascular disease risk reduction in a cardiac rehabilitation setting. American Journal of
      Cardiology 1997;80(8B):69H-73H
  3. Comprehensive cardiovascular disease risk reduction in the clinical setting. Coronary Artery Disease 1998;
      9:731-735.
  4. Innovative approaches to comprehensive cardiovascular disease risk reduction in clinical and community-based
      settings. Current Atherosclerosis Reports 2001; 3:498-506
  5. Effects of a contemporary, exercise-based rehabilitation and cardiovascular risk reduction program on coronary
      patients with abnormal baseline risk factors. CHEST 2002; 122:338-343
  6. Effectiveness of 3 models for comprehensive cardiovascular disease risk reduction. American Journal of
      Cardiology 2002;89:1263-1268
  7.   Effectiveness of therapeutic lifestyle changes in patients with hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and/or
      hyperglycemia. American Journal of Cardiology 2004; 94: 1558-1561
  8. Effect of comprehensive therapeutic lifestyle changes on pre-hypertension. American Journal of Cardiology 2008;
      102; 1677-1680.
  9. Health-risk appraisal with or without disease management for worksite cardiovascular risk reduction. Journal of
      Cardiovascular Nursing 2008; 23: 513-518.
  10. Clinical effectiveness of lifestyle health coaching: Case study of an evidence-based, technology-enabled, outcomes
      oriented, comprehensive program. 2012 (In Review).
Scientific Evidence
                                                                                         INTERVENT U.S.A.
Percent change in 10-year Framingham CHD Risk Score in higher-risk employees




                 Source: Published in Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing, November 2008
Scientific Validation
                                                                                         INTERVENT U.S.A.
Percentage of participants who achieved goal levels in classic CVD risk factors
without medications within three months of initiating the program




                    Source: Published in American Journal of Cardiology, December 2004
Drug use among
                                                          INTERVENT compliers*




*No statistically significant differences between baseline vs. follow-up rates. Follow-up assessed at 12 weeks
                                                                       Gordon NF; Am J Cardiol 2002; 89:1263-68
Publications
Return On Investment
                                                                                                         INTERVENT U.S.A.


               State of Oklahoma Pilot: Average Health Care Claims
                          Per Employee in 2002 vs. 2003



          $2.30 savings for every $1 spent
                                              Non-INTERVENT
                                               Participants


                                                                         INTERVENT
                                                                         Participants




Notes: INTERVENT Program was implemented in January 2003. Participants enrolled in the INTERVENT Program in 2003 and
         completed a full year of service and evaluations. Analysis performed, in part, by Milliman Consultants and Actuaries.
Return On Investment
                                                           INTERVENT Canada
     138.4 minutes per week gain in exercise among sedentary
                           employees
             35.7% improved medication compliance
                ROIpresenteeism $4.42 for every $1 spent




Gamma-Dynacare Medical Laboratories Employee Case-study
Meta-Evaluation of Worksite Health
             Promotion Economic Return Studies: 2012 Update
             Chapman LS. Am J Health Promo 2012; 26: TAHP-1-TAHP-12



• Meta-evaluation of 62 economic return on
  investment studies of multi-component worksite
  wellness/health promotion
• Average duration of follow-up = 3.83 years
• Number of study subjects = 546,971
• Key findings:
     % Change in sick leave absenteeism = -25.1%
     % Change in workers’compensation costs = -40.4%
     % Change in disability management costs = -24.2%
     % Change in health costs = -24.5%
     Cost:Benefit Ratio = 1:5.56 (i.e., ROI = 556%)
US Companies Use of
Disease Management Programs
Shoppers Drug Mart

Select Data from HRA and Lifestyle
Health Coaching Summary Analyses
Shoppers Drug Mart

Dr. Dorian Lo, Executive Vice President, Pharmacy and Healthcare at
Shoppers Drug Mart
                      Previous positions include:
                      • President, Shoppers Drug Mart Health Solutions
                      • Medco Health Solutions, Chief Medical Officer,
                        Health Plans
                      • McKinsey & Company
                      • Boards: Society of Aging of New York, Chilton
                        Memorial Hospital Foundation
                      • MBA (Wharton) and MD (University of Western
                        Ontario)
Why did Shoppers Drug Mart
                                 Implement a Program?
The program allowed us to further invest into our employees’
health.

• “Walk-the-Walk”of promoting good health and counseling
• Supports our culture of Caring
• Demonstrate SDM as a Top Employer
• Use health information to stratify patients for disease management
  and holistic employee care
What Did We Hope to Achieve?

Shoppers had the following goals:


• Improve productivity through decreased absenteeism and better
  employee health
• Improve intermediate outcomes and select clinical end-points
• Improve employee satisfaction
Description of the Program
• First Step: Health Risk Assessment (HRA)
   • Phase 1 – offered to Corporate Head Office ~ 1200 employees
   • Phase 2 – rolled out to Allied Business Units ~ 500 employees
   • Integrated with flex benefits insurance program
   • Integrated Lab Results
• Second Step: Referrals
   • Referrals to Certified Diabetes Educators and Employee Assistance Program
   • Coached programs for higher risk employees
   • On-line lifestyle management programs
• Encouraging Success
   • Optimum points and other incentives
   • 76% of employees started an HRA
   • 96% completion rate
Our Workforce: Mainly Women

                      BU 1         BU 2          BU 3        ALL        BOB



   Completed
                      832           110          261        1,203        --
  HRA (Number)




      Male             373                                    479
                                 33 (30.0%)   73 (28.0%)
     (n & %)         (44.8%)                                (39.8%)    (49.6%)




     Female                                                   724
                   459 (55.2%)   77 (70.0%)   188 (72.0%)
     (n & % )                                               (60.2%)    (50.4%)




(BU = Business Unit; ALL = All BUs combined; BOB = Book of Business)
Our Workforce:
                                    Average Age of 40 y.o.
                  BU 1     BU 2       BU 3      ALL     BOB



     Age          42.3 M   37.1 M     39.1 M   41.5 M   43.4 M
    (Years)       40.5 F   41.8 F     37.7 F   39.9 F   42.9 F



   Males –
                  18.4%    7.3%       8.0%     15.1%    23.4%
Age 45 or Older



  Females –
                  3.8%     10.9%      5.0%     4.7%     8.3%
Age 55 or Older
SDM Employees were at lower risk
                                           than INTERVENT’s book of business
                     1st Level                                                         2nd Level            Lower
                                                         Lower Risk
                  of Stratification                                                 of Stratification     Intensity
                                                         0-2 Risk Factors
               (Industry Standard)                                                  (INTERVENT)         Intervention
                                                          59% / 79%
                                                                                                         35% / 59%


                                                           Moderate                                       Moderate
                           Population                                                Individual           Intensity
  HRA                     stratification
                                                            Risk
                                                         3-4 Risk Factors           stratification      Intervention
                                                          32% / 18%                                      30% / 23%


                                                        Higher Risk                                        Higher
                                                         5 + Risk Factors                                 Intensity
                                                            9% / 3%                                     Intervention
                                                                                                         35% / 18%
Level 1 =     risk for future direct and indirect health care-related expenditure
             (“health risk stratification”);
Level 2 = intensity of lifestyle health coaching required to facilitate risk        Key:
             reduction in moderate/higher-risk individuals and to keep
apparently healthy individuals healthy (“intervention intensity                     BOB;
stratification”)                                                                    Shoppers Drug Mart
Our various business units had
                                     similar Wellness Scores

                 80

                 79
                                         78
                 78    77.6                      77.6
Wellness Score




                 77             76.4
                 76

                 75

                 74

                 73
                      BU 1     BU 2     BU 3     ALL
78.3% of Participants are at a higher
                                   than desirable risk for CVD
Only 21.7% of participants are at a desirable risk for cardiovascular
disease. This is a concern but this is not a surprising observation.
                                       BU 1    BU 2    BU 3    ALL


  Known CVD, Heart Failure, and/or
                                       4.1%    2.7%    3.4%    3.8%
           Diabetes


 One or More Potentially Modifiable
                                       73.6%   78.2%   75.9%   74.5%
         CVD Risk Factors

 Total at Higher Than Desirable Risk
                                       77.7%   80.9%   79.3%   78.3%
               for CVD

 Mean 10-Yr Risk for Coronary Heart
                                       4.3%    2.0%    3.2%    4.0%
              Disease

    10% or Higher 10-Yr Risk for
                                       7.7%     0%      0%     6.6%
      Coronary Heart Disease
Weight remains the main risk factor

Prevalence (%) of Six Major Modifiable Risk Factors Among HRA
Participants by Business Sectors
Business    Current Prehypertension      Abnormal    Prediabetes   Overweight    Physical
Sector     Cigarette or Hypertension    Cholesterol or Diabetes        or       Inactivity
           Smoker                         and/or                     Obese
                                       Triglycerides


BU1         8.2%         25.5%            12.6%         5.0%         54.6%       39.3%



BU2         14.5%        36.4%            10.9%         2.7%         58.2%       41.8%


BU3         8.0%         23.4%            7.7%          2.3%         42.9%        48.3


ALL         8.7%         26.0%            11.4%         4.2%         52.4%       41.5%
Stress is another main risk factor

Prevalence (%) of Other Select Risk Factors, Chronic Conditions or
Negative Health Behaviors
  Business   Great Deal    Poor    Sleep Apnea or   Medications   Medications   Asthma
  Sectors    of Stress    Eating     Evidence of    for Anxiety       for
              (Home/      Habits   Another Sleep                  Depression
               Work)                  Disorder


 BU1           41.3%      32.7%        31.0%            3.5           3.4        6.9



 BU2           44.5%      45.5%        32.7%           3.6%          5.5%       12.7%


 BU3           39.1%      43.7%        28.3%           3.8%          4.2%       10.0%


 ALL           41.1%      36.2%        30.6%           3.6%          3.7%       8.1%
High interest from our employees

Weight Management (%)

                  70
                  60

                  50
     Percentage




                  40                                  35.9
                                                                 30.9
                  30        25.5   26.3

                  20

                  10
                  0
                       Somewhat Interested          Very Interested

                         Shoppers Drug Mart   Book of Business
High interest from our employees

Exercise Training (%)

                  70
                  60
                                                      48.3
                  50
     Percentage




                  40                                             34.9
                            29.4   29.1
                  30

                  20
                  10

                  0
                       Somewhat Interested          Very Interested

                         Shoppers Drug Mart   Book of Business
High interest from our employees

Smoking Cessation (%)

                  70
                  60
                                                      47.7
                  50
     Percentage




                  40                                             36.2

                  30        23.9   26.8

                  20
                  10

                  0
                       Somewhat Interested          Very Interested

                         Shoppers Drug Mart   Book of Business
High interest from our employees

Nutrition (%)

                  70
                  60
                                                      49.0
                  50
     Percentage




                  40                                             35.2
                            29.6   29.9
                  30

                  20
                  10

                  0
                       Somewhat Interested          Very Interested

                         Shoppers Drug Mart   Book of Business
High interest from our employees

Stress Management (%)

                  70
                  60

                  50
     Percentage




                  40        32.8
                                                      30.8
                  30               28.1
                                                                 22
                  20
                  10

                  0
                       Somewhat Interested          Very Interested

                         Shoppers Drug Mart   Book of Business
Lifestyle Health Coaching:
            Demographics
Intermediate outcomes have
   improved for participants
% of at risk participants has
                                                               decreased through coaching
                                Prevalence of Potentially Modifiable Risk Factors
                     Participants at Baseline + Follow-up (n=75; average follow-up=~20 weeks)
             80
                  78.6
             70
             60
                         59.5
                                                                                                   55.7
             50                  53.7
Percentage




                                                                                                          45.9   Prevalence at
             40                         41.5                  41.9                                               Program Entry
                                                                                        37 36.8
             30                                                      33.8
                                                                                                                 Prevalence at
                                                                                                                 Follow-up
             20                                 22.7                                                             Evaluation
                                                       18.2
             10                                                             12.0 12.0

             0
                   Elevated       Elevated     Elevated LDL   Obesity       Cigarette   Elevated    Stress
                  Systolic BP   Diastolic BP    Cholesterol                 Smokers      Blood
                                                                                        Glucose
Shoppers Drug Mart Considerations

Employers need to balance investments vs the importance of
qualitative employee health & wellness.
• HR and CFOs are reluctant to pay for programs until ROI is proven in
  Canada
    HRA and disease management reinvestment is typically
     combined with a restructuring of benefits offering
    Canadian studies are needed to establish ROI for employers
• Should Government subsidize DM since these activities can reduce
  their medical expenditures
    US studies show that most of the impact from DM relates to
     hospitalization and overall burden from chronic care
• Incentives and convenience are required to drive strong
  participation (including on-site health clinics to collect lab results)
Conclusion
• HRA is a key enabling step in managing health and wellness since
  it provides health data
• HRA’s use is in deriving positive ROI from interventions
• Employers can utilize existing research and their own data to
  judge overall benefits of DM initiatives and to ensure programs
  are targeted and customized to their employees’ needs

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Neil F. Gordon, INTERxVENT

  • 1. MaRS Business of Aging Conference April 30, 2012
  • 2. Agenda Dr. Neil Gordon, Founder INTERVENT  INTERVENT Overview  Global vs Canadian Corporate Wellness / Disease Management Program Uptake  Outcomes / Science Dr. Dorian Lo, EVP, Pharmacy and Healthcare at Shoppers Drug Mart Case Study:  Why Shoppers Drug Mart Implemented a Health / Wellness Program  Shoppers Drug Mart Employee Program Overview  Results  Challenges Conclusion
  • 3. INTERVENT Founder  Founded INTERVENT in 1997 Dr. Neil Gordon  Used evidence-based research and clinicalled INTERVENT’s nationally recognized organizations and guidelines from Founder national/international expansion  Past director of exercise physiology at the world renowned Cooper Research Institute in Dallas, TX  Former clinical professor of medicine at the Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta, GA  Past Chairman of the American Heart Association Committee on Exercise, Cardiac Rehabilitation and Prevention  Devoted over 30 years to the prevention of cardiovascular disease and other chronic illnesses  Published over 100 scientific manuscripts and 8 books on prevention/disease management
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  • 6. INTERVENT Overview  INTERVENT is a global lifestyle management and chronic disease risk reduction company based in Toronto, Canada and Savannah, GA, USA.  INTERVENT develops, licenses and provides evidence-based programs for the prevention and management of multiple chronic diseases.  Mission: To help significantly improve individual and population-based measures of health while simultaneously reducing health care costs and enhancing productivity
  • 7. The Evolution of INTERVENT  Programs originally based on research available in the early 1990s, especially the Stanford Coronary Risk Intervention Project (SCRIP).  After completion of original research study in Dallas, TX, INTERVENT USA, Inc. was founded in 1997; INTERVENT Canada was subsequently launched in 2007.  Since 1997, considerable time and effort has been spent developing, testing and successfully implementing INTERVENT’s evidence-based, technology-enabled, outcomes-oriented, comprehensive lifestyle management and chronic disease risk reduction programs.
  • 8. A Treatment Platform that builds… Risk Intervention Management Assessment Options Areas • Nutrition • Weight Management Evaluation and Follow-up Self-help • Physical Activity Intervention • Stress Management (web/mail) • Tobacco Cessation Numerous • Diabetes •Health Risk Assessment •Stratification Program • High touch Modules • Integrated with web- based program Health Coach • Formal, structured, Assisted Intervention systematic approach (telephonic/web/on-site/mail) • Personalized support
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  • 11. 1st Level 2nd Level of Stratification of Stratification (Industry Standard) (INTERVENT) Lower Lower Risk Intensity 0-2 Risk Factors Intervention 59% 35% Moderate Moderate Population Individual Intensity HRA stratification Risk 3-4 Risk Factors stratification Intervention 32% 30% Higher Risk Higher 5 + Risk Factors Intensity 9% Intervention 35% Level 1 = risk for future direct and indirect health care-related expenditure (“health risk stratification”); Level 2 = intensity of lifestyle health coaching required to facilitate risk Key: reduction in moderate/higher-risk individuals and to keep apparently healthy individuals healthy (“intervention intensity BOB Data stratification”)
  • 12. Referrals to Allied Healthcare Providers Consent to have EAP make an outbound call
  • 13. Physician Summary Report Partnering with C-CHANGE to ensure concordance with Canadian guidelines
  • 14. Lifestyle Management Programs: Key Steps  Be sure that the Lifestyle Management Program that you select incorporates all of the following essential components: 1. Identification of At-Risk Individuals 2. Risk Factor Determination 3. Goal Setting 4. Action Plan Formulation (guideline-based) 5. Action Plan Implementation 6. Referrals to Allied Health Care Providers (MD; Pharmacist; CDE; EAP) 7. Follow-up Evaluation and Progress Reports 8. Compliance Enhancement/Tracking 9. Aggregate Outcomes Assessment 10. All of the above should all be evidence-based…
  • 15. Coaching Methodology • Incorporates multiple behavior-change techniques: e.g., stages of change, motivational interviewing, single concept learning theory Coaching • Educational kits, audios, eating and exercise diaries and on-line materials Philosophy support the foundation for behavioral change • Comprehensive goals and action plan linked to health risk factors • Dedicated health coaches assigned to participants; pull in specialists as needed Emotional • Wellness Vision Support • Focus is on the individual • Evidence-based medicine approach • Formal, structured, systematic approach Interventions • Nature and intensity of intervention individualized based on multiple factors, including risk status and readiness to change Progress • System supports tracking of qualitative and quantitative results • Follow-up reports utilized during the program allow the participant to Tracking track their progress along the way • Quality audits help ensure delivery of a high-quality program Quality • Calls tracked and recorded
  • 16. Better Health for Life℠ 16
  • 17. Better Health for Life℠ 17
  • 18. Interventions Driven by Hard Science (with documented outcomes) Approximately 100 published scientific abstracts or manuscripts documenting benefits in terms of multiple risk factors, clinical variables, self-reported health status and ROI (Including numerous publications in peer-reviewed medical journals and independent third- party research) Key scientific manuscripts include: 1. Comparison of single versus multiple lifestyle interventions: Are the antihypertensive effects of exercise training and diet-induced weight loss additive? American Journal of Cardiology 1997;79:763-767 2. Comprehensive cardiovascular disease risk reduction in a cardiac rehabilitation setting. American Journal of Cardiology 1997;80(8B):69H-73H 3. Comprehensive cardiovascular disease risk reduction in the clinical setting. Coronary Artery Disease 1998; 9:731-735. 4. Innovative approaches to comprehensive cardiovascular disease risk reduction in clinical and community-based settings. Current Atherosclerosis Reports 2001; 3:498-506 5. Effects of a contemporary, exercise-based rehabilitation and cardiovascular risk reduction program on coronary patients with abnormal baseline risk factors. CHEST 2002; 122:338-343 6. Effectiveness of 3 models for comprehensive cardiovascular disease risk reduction. American Journal of Cardiology 2002;89:1263-1268 7. Effectiveness of therapeutic lifestyle changes in patients with hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and/or hyperglycemia. American Journal of Cardiology 2004; 94: 1558-1561 8. Effect of comprehensive therapeutic lifestyle changes on pre-hypertension. American Journal of Cardiology 2008; 102; 1677-1680. 9. Health-risk appraisal with or without disease management for worksite cardiovascular risk reduction. Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing 2008; 23: 513-518. 10. Clinical effectiveness of lifestyle health coaching: Case study of an evidence-based, technology-enabled, outcomes oriented, comprehensive program. 2012 (In Review).
  • 19. Scientific Evidence INTERVENT U.S.A. Percent change in 10-year Framingham CHD Risk Score in higher-risk employees Source: Published in Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing, November 2008
  • 20. Scientific Validation INTERVENT U.S.A. Percentage of participants who achieved goal levels in classic CVD risk factors without medications within three months of initiating the program Source: Published in American Journal of Cardiology, December 2004
  • 21. Drug use among INTERVENT compliers* *No statistically significant differences between baseline vs. follow-up rates. Follow-up assessed at 12 weeks Gordon NF; Am J Cardiol 2002; 89:1263-68
  • 23. Return On Investment INTERVENT U.S.A. State of Oklahoma Pilot: Average Health Care Claims Per Employee in 2002 vs. 2003 $2.30 savings for every $1 spent Non-INTERVENT Participants INTERVENT Participants Notes: INTERVENT Program was implemented in January 2003. Participants enrolled in the INTERVENT Program in 2003 and completed a full year of service and evaluations. Analysis performed, in part, by Milliman Consultants and Actuaries.
  • 24. Return On Investment INTERVENT Canada 138.4 minutes per week gain in exercise among sedentary employees 35.7% improved medication compliance ROIpresenteeism $4.42 for every $1 spent Gamma-Dynacare Medical Laboratories Employee Case-study
  • 25. Meta-Evaluation of Worksite Health Promotion Economic Return Studies: 2012 Update Chapman LS. Am J Health Promo 2012; 26: TAHP-1-TAHP-12 • Meta-evaluation of 62 economic return on investment studies of multi-component worksite wellness/health promotion • Average duration of follow-up = 3.83 years • Number of study subjects = 546,971 • Key findings:  % Change in sick leave absenteeism = -25.1%  % Change in workers’compensation costs = -40.4%  % Change in disability management costs = -24.2%  % Change in health costs = -24.5%  Cost:Benefit Ratio = 1:5.56 (i.e., ROI = 556%)
  • 26. US Companies Use of Disease Management Programs
  • 27. Shoppers Drug Mart Select Data from HRA and Lifestyle Health Coaching Summary Analyses
  • 28. Shoppers Drug Mart Dr. Dorian Lo, Executive Vice President, Pharmacy and Healthcare at Shoppers Drug Mart Previous positions include: • President, Shoppers Drug Mart Health Solutions • Medco Health Solutions, Chief Medical Officer, Health Plans • McKinsey & Company • Boards: Society of Aging of New York, Chilton Memorial Hospital Foundation • MBA (Wharton) and MD (University of Western Ontario)
  • 29. Why did Shoppers Drug Mart Implement a Program? The program allowed us to further invest into our employees’ health. • “Walk-the-Walk”of promoting good health and counseling • Supports our culture of Caring • Demonstrate SDM as a Top Employer • Use health information to stratify patients for disease management and holistic employee care
  • 30. What Did We Hope to Achieve? Shoppers had the following goals: • Improve productivity through decreased absenteeism and better employee health • Improve intermediate outcomes and select clinical end-points • Improve employee satisfaction
  • 31. Description of the Program • First Step: Health Risk Assessment (HRA) • Phase 1 – offered to Corporate Head Office ~ 1200 employees • Phase 2 – rolled out to Allied Business Units ~ 500 employees • Integrated with flex benefits insurance program • Integrated Lab Results • Second Step: Referrals • Referrals to Certified Diabetes Educators and Employee Assistance Program • Coached programs for higher risk employees • On-line lifestyle management programs • Encouraging Success • Optimum points and other incentives • 76% of employees started an HRA • 96% completion rate
  • 32. Our Workforce: Mainly Women BU 1 BU 2 BU 3 ALL BOB Completed 832 110 261 1,203 -- HRA (Number) Male 373 479 33 (30.0%) 73 (28.0%) (n & %) (44.8%) (39.8%) (49.6%) Female 724 459 (55.2%) 77 (70.0%) 188 (72.0%) (n & % ) (60.2%) (50.4%) (BU = Business Unit; ALL = All BUs combined; BOB = Book of Business)
  • 33. Our Workforce: Average Age of 40 y.o. BU 1 BU 2 BU 3 ALL BOB Age 42.3 M 37.1 M 39.1 M 41.5 M 43.4 M (Years) 40.5 F 41.8 F 37.7 F 39.9 F 42.9 F Males – 18.4% 7.3% 8.0% 15.1% 23.4% Age 45 or Older Females – 3.8% 10.9% 5.0% 4.7% 8.3% Age 55 or Older
  • 34. SDM Employees were at lower risk than INTERVENT’s book of business 1st Level 2nd Level Lower Lower Risk of Stratification of Stratification Intensity 0-2 Risk Factors (Industry Standard) (INTERVENT) Intervention 59% / 79% 35% / 59% Moderate Moderate Population Individual Intensity HRA stratification Risk 3-4 Risk Factors stratification Intervention 32% / 18% 30% / 23% Higher Risk Higher 5 + Risk Factors Intensity 9% / 3% Intervention 35% / 18% Level 1 = risk for future direct and indirect health care-related expenditure (“health risk stratification”); Level 2 = intensity of lifestyle health coaching required to facilitate risk Key: reduction in moderate/higher-risk individuals and to keep apparently healthy individuals healthy (“intervention intensity BOB; stratification”) Shoppers Drug Mart
  • 35. Our various business units had similar Wellness Scores 80 79 78 78 77.6 77.6 Wellness Score 77 76.4 76 75 74 73 BU 1 BU 2 BU 3 ALL
  • 36. 78.3% of Participants are at a higher than desirable risk for CVD Only 21.7% of participants are at a desirable risk for cardiovascular disease. This is a concern but this is not a surprising observation. BU 1 BU 2 BU 3 ALL Known CVD, Heart Failure, and/or 4.1% 2.7% 3.4% 3.8% Diabetes One or More Potentially Modifiable 73.6% 78.2% 75.9% 74.5% CVD Risk Factors Total at Higher Than Desirable Risk 77.7% 80.9% 79.3% 78.3% for CVD Mean 10-Yr Risk for Coronary Heart 4.3% 2.0% 3.2% 4.0% Disease 10% or Higher 10-Yr Risk for 7.7% 0% 0% 6.6% Coronary Heart Disease
  • 37. Weight remains the main risk factor Prevalence (%) of Six Major Modifiable Risk Factors Among HRA Participants by Business Sectors Business Current Prehypertension Abnormal Prediabetes Overweight Physical Sector Cigarette or Hypertension Cholesterol or Diabetes or Inactivity Smoker and/or Obese Triglycerides BU1 8.2% 25.5% 12.6% 5.0% 54.6% 39.3% BU2 14.5% 36.4% 10.9% 2.7% 58.2% 41.8% BU3 8.0% 23.4% 7.7% 2.3% 42.9% 48.3 ALL 8.7% 26.0% 11.4% 4.2% 52.4% 41.5%
  • 38. Stress is another main risk factor Prevalence (%) of Other Select Risk Factors, Chronic Conditions or Negative Health Behaviors Business Great Deal Poor Sleep Apnea or Medications Medications Asthma Sectors of Stress Eating Evidence of for Anxiety for (Home/ Habits Another Sleep Depression Work) Disorder BU1 41.3% 32.7% 31.0% 3.5 3.4 6.9 BU2 44.5% 45.5% 32.7% 3.6% 5.5% 12.7% BU3 39.1% 43.7% 28.3% 3.8% 4.2% 10.0% ALL 41.1% 36.2% 30.6% 3.6% 3.7% 8.1%
  • 39. High interest from our employees Weight Management (%) 70 60 50 Percentage 40 35.9 30.9 30 25.5 26.3 20 10 0 Somewhat Interested Very Interested Shoppers Drug Mart Book of Business
  • 40. High interest from our employees Exercise Training (%) 70 60 48.3 50 Percentage 40 34.9 29.4 29.1 30 20 10 0 Somewhat Interested Very Interested Shoppers Drug Mart Book of Business
  • 41. High interest from our employees Smoking Cessation (%) 70 60 47.7 50 Percentage 40 36.2 30 23.9 26.8 20 10 0 Somewhat Interested Very Interested Shoppers Drug Mart Book of Business
  • 42. High interest from our employees Nutrition (%) 70 60 49.0 50 Percentage 40 35.2 29.6 29.9 30 20 10 0 Somewhat Interested Very Interested Shoppers Drug Mart Book of Business
  • 43. High interest from our employees Stress Management (%) 70 60 50 Percentage 40 32.8 30.8 30 28.1 22 20 10 0 Somewhat Interested Very Interested Shoppers Drug Mart Book of Business
  • 45. Intermediate outcomes have improved for participants
  • 46. % of at risk participants has decreased through coaching Prevalence of Potentially Modifiable Risk Factors Participants at Baseline + Follow-up (n=75; average follow-up=~20 weeks) 80 78.6 70 60 59.5 55.7 50 53.7 Percentage 45.9 Prevalence at 40 41.5 41.9 Program Entry 37 36.8 30 33.8 Prevalence at Follow-up 20 22.7 Evaluation 18.2 10 12.0 12.0 0 Elevated Elevated Elevated LDL Obesity Cigarette Elevated Stress Systolic BP Diastolic BP Cholesterol Smokers Blood Glucose
  • 47. Shoppers Drug Mart Considerations Employers need to balance investments vs the importance of qualitative employee health & wellness. • HR and CFOs are reluctant to pay for programs until ROI is proven in Canada  HRA and disease management reinvestment is typically combined with a restructuring of benefits offering  Canadian studies are needed to establish ROI for employers • Should Government subsidize DM since these activities can reduce their medical expenditures  US studies show that most of the impact from DM relates to hospitalization and overall burden from chronic care • Incentives and convenience are required to drive strong participation (including on-site health clinics to collect lab results)
  • 48. Conclusion • HRA is a key enabling step in managing health and wellness since it provides health data • HRA’s use is in deriving positive ROI from interventions • Employers can utilize existing research and their own data to judge overall benefits of DM initiatives and to ensure programs are targeted and customized to their employees’ needs

Notes de l'éditeur

  1. Slide Title Coaching and Methodology Differentiators About This Slide Our coaching formula makes us different Three Key Points for Audience Our coaching program is designed to be high touch and personalized, because changing a lifestyle involves adapting to a new behavior until it becomes a habit. We know that participants who have a positive experience will more likely stick with the changes. Our customized programs are built using evidence-based medicine, setting goals and implementing action plans. We see ourselves as a extension of an individual ’s healthcare team. When necessary, we will consult with an individual’s doctor. We track progress, collecting and analyzing both quantitative and qualitative data throughout entire interaction. We also conduct quality audits to ensure ongoing delivery of high-quality programs.