This session by Fran Melmed, Owner of context communication consulting llc, and Michelle James, Health Communication Manager for Intel, was presented at the APA Practice Organization's 2010 Psychologically Healthy Workplace Conference. The program explores what it takes to create a culture of wellness in the workplace. Topics include what makes a message connect, how we can support individual behavior change on a mass scale, where the fun is and why we should embrace a powerful new communication
tool: social media. Participants learned how to create, implement and measure an integrated communication strategy that involves and supports all stakeholders, heard how leading companies approach health and wellness communications and discusssed how to use social networking, m-health and other marketplace innovations to enhance employee well-being and organizational performance.
19. Don’t be Sisyphus. Photo: http://flickr.com/photos/pasukaru76/4307189567
20. It’s critical to first consider what health challenges people face, what decisions people need to make, and how they make them before developing information to assist.
24. From 4% to 7.5% HDHP enrollment 92% have the knowledge to discuss treatments with providers 20% reduction in junk food 60 TONS of weight lost 16K idea groups 47% dropped one risk level ROI from the trenches
25. $3.27:$1.00-medical costs $2.73: $1.00-absenteeism 8X more likely to be engaged 1.8 fewer days absent 11% higher revenue per employee 28% higher shareholder returns ROI from the research
26. fran melmed context communication consulting e: fran@contextcommunication.com p: 215.922.2525 twitter: @femelmed website: contextcommunication.com blog: freerangecomm.com
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28. Monthly twitter chats, every third Wednesday from noon to 1 pm EST
39. Gives employees a convenient and completely confidential way to evaluate and understand their health risks and to positively affect their health; on-site clinics provide high-quality, lower cost, and convenience31
48. Leverage suppliers58% 48% 28% Consumer Plan Enrollment 7% Wellness program participation 50% 35% 34% 32
49. Communication Objectives What we want to accomplish: Build trust with employees that Intel provides comprehensive health care benefits and confidential onsite health care and wellness services Deliver simple and action oriented messages Drive awareness of employees’ responsibility to understand and manager their health, and make informed health care choices Drive usage of tools and resources that are available to help employees Inspire and motivate employees to take action toward achieving their best possible health and quality of life
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51. Use frequent and ongoing communications to strengthen employee participation and engagement in health benefits and wellness programs
67. What employees had to say. . . 39 “The personal stories of people and the plans they’ve chosen is really wonderful approach – very creative and very welcoming.” “Most successful Planet Blue group seen yet” “I was going to keep my current coverage because I understood the basics and am happy with my CDHP (I’ve got $7K in HRA). I kind of ignored all the info-sharing channels because in my head I made my decision. Until late last week… I caught a comment in a blog about “extra bucks” and being able to move my HRA dollars to HDHP. Suddenly I thought ‘wait, I need to look into this and the HDHP’. Had it not been for those discussions in Planet Blue I never would have known about this.” “Cool! I think a Planet Blue group is a positive move for Annual Enrollment and designates a place to get information, Q&A, etc. for Annual Enrollment this year and future years.”
68. 40 Social Media A-ha’s Dialogue is content Break the rules Word of mouth Employees respond to various methods of communicating – continue using multiple channels
69. Michelle James, MBA Intel Corporation Health Communication Manager Email: michelle.james@intel.com Phone: (505) 893-5606 Twitter: @michellewjames 41
Notes de l'éditeur
Why: You, we and simplicityKeys to success, in my book. A focus on the individual.A focus on community and shared gain.A focus on KISS.
Real people don’t look like this. And real people don’t respond to comms with ppl that look like this. Or to messages to bots like these.
This is who you’re addressing. Real people. With real concerns, backgrounds, histories. What concerns them: their families, their ability to retire, get ahead, make money. Their privacy and confidentiality. Messages should hit on the things that concernthem, not you. Messages and comms channels should be tailored based on your workforce’s demographics. One size does not fit all. Based on age, gender, behaviors, risks/conditions, costs Based on how they work, what they know, where they need your help
Companies want their employees to be health care consumers. they want them to live healthier lives.Are you telling them? or inviting them? Are you admonishing them? Or supporting them? Leaders set tone and priority. Sr management What gets measured: EHS, profit-sharing (SGC plant) Time and policies (micro-obstacles)But it can’t be all about the company. For ex, WF and their healthy incentive program. Their comms focused on rising healthcare costs. Company saving money: important to ees? Sure thing – if it save their job, saves their health care, saves them money.
Several “wes” involved in successful comms:Employee + familyEmployee + peersEmployee + companyLeaders & managersVendorsHREHSPeersComms needs to pull on all of these different “wes.”
Who and what’s important to people? Comms must hit on these messages as we’ve said.Who will they listen to? Comms must leverage and include these sources.
Several “wes” involved in successful comms:Employee + familyEmployee + peersEmployee + companyLeaders & managersVendorsHREHSPeersComms needs to pull on all of these different “wes.”
How can companies achieve health 2.0: patient-empowered health care. http://www.pewinternet.org/Reports/2009/8-The-Social-Life-of-Health-Information/03-Social-Media-and-Health/1-Many-seek-a-justintime-someonelikeme-but-few-post-their-own-stories.aspx?r=1Blogs, wikis,microblogs, mobile phones
Trusted information and resources (beyond your vendors. Think external information:cdc, for example)Peer-to-peer: wellness champions, success stories, social networking (condition-related, hobby-related), blogs/microblogs (Twitter, success stories)Mobile technology
Design: challenges, team-based, altruistic efforts, built into the day, health gamesComms: Tone, channels: videos, posters, contests, celebrationsEx: kids’ art contest, photo contest, exercise video, awards competition
You can’t go it alone. Pull on ppl/groups around you and support them.Managers: e-newsletters, training, toolkitsHR: toolkits, forums, bulletin board packets, e-newsletters, trainingEHS: integrated comms, metrics Vendors: integration of comms – map employee experience. Vendor summits.
Design + communication = KISS
Bring it all together: ee benefits portalEase of useSite architecture and language based on user, not on providerIntegrate with providers’ info
Design + communication = KISS
You complete me: Convergence of wellness design + wellness communicationOne influences the other; How you approach reveals your interests How you design your program and how well it’s integrated w/other HR programs and your vendor’s services says more about whether you’re gearing it to employees’ needs or vendors’ How you use incentives & what you pay for says more about whether you’re interested in tasks or in supporting behavior changeWhat channels you use and how says whether you’re interested in moving info or facilitating conversationWhat you measure indicates an interest in transactions or transformationPushing out comms that don’t line up with reality are like sisyphus rolling the rock up hill. Get design & comms integrated – with vendors, with other programs, with one another.
Start with your data: health risks, claims/health care utilization, workers’ compensation, use of EAP, etc. Bring it all together. Know what people know and don’t know about finding info. Center for Studying Health System Change finds that just 41% of patients have the knowledge and confidence required to manage their health in this new world. What are you doing to help them?
Start with a framework that can help you know how ppl go through change. Real people don’t become healthy overnight. Or simply because you pay them to. Design and communication need to recognize where the individual is and help him or her move along. From design perspective: programs, incentives, resources that support change--not simply reward for listening to a webinar. From comms perspective:Ex:HRA report – Is it generic or specific to your programs? Website – Do you have information, tools, and resources that address all stages?Personalized comms: Do you tailor your comms based on gender, age, insurance use, HRA results?(very hard to do. needs to be in partnership with/done by vendors. Or depends on really good internal lists) Personal stories: Do you use EE success stories, marketing campaigns to address misinformation/apprehension (Disease management)Social networking: We.
GINA, HIPAA.
What to measure?AwarenessPerceptionParticipationUltimately: Risk scores, costs, productivity, safety, absenteeism Tie-in to EHSIBM metrics
1. IMS Health2. Saint-Gobain Corp3. IBM Virtual Food Pro (2004)4 + 5. Wal-mart6. Intel cohort group
1 + 2. Harvard study. http://www.nhsconfed.org/Networks/MentalHealth/LatestNews/Pages/Workplace-Wellness.aspx3. The Wellness Imperative, Creating More Effective Organizations, Word Economic Forum in partnership with Right Management (Manpower) 4. Towers Watson 2009/2010 Staying At Work study