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"75% of
health care spending pays for illnesses which are preventable".
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Centers for Disease Control
Four of the leading
causes of death in the nation—heart disease, cancer, stroke, and
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease —are directly linked to
unhealthy lifestyles and tobacco use. Encouraging individuals to
adopt healthy habits and practices may reduce the burden of chronic
disease in communities throughout the United States. Public and
private efforts and programs are increasingly designed to promote
these healthy behaviors and lifestyles. Employers are becoming more
aware that obesity, lack of physical activity, and tobacco use are
adversely affecting the health and productivity of their employees
and ultimately, the businesses’ bottom line. As a result, innovative
employers are providing their employees with a variety of
work-site-based health promotion and disease prevention programs
using health coaches and the “trans- theoretical theory of change”
approach to wellness. These programs have been shown to improve
employee health, increase productivity and yield a significant
return on investment for the employer.
What is a Health
Coaching Program?
Health coaching
programs help people make smart choices about health behaviors
through education, motivation and reinforcement of healthy options.
Taking the time to build a rapport, assess readiness to change,
identify areas of need and to create an action plan, leads to a
healthier outcome. Research proves that this personalized,
collaborative approach is more effective than the cookie-cutter
method that often leaves those most at risk far behind.
Health Coaches
typically are licensed, degreed healthcare professionals that have
made the choice to work one-on-one with their clients, outside of
the typical “medical model”; empowering them to make long-term
healthy changes by building solid skills that will last a lifetime.
Wellness Promotion
Employee wellness
education is the starting point of prevention. It is about
encouraging individuals who have demonstrated the behaviors of
healthy living and providing them with the tools and support they
need to stay fit, manage stress and continue to make good health
decisions. Programs often include initiatives such as health risk
assessments, on-site screenings, preventive care reminders, health
club memberships, and financial incentives.
By promoting
healthy behaviors, employers can reduce overall healthcare costs and
absenteeism as well as support a “culture of health” and wellness.
Health Improvement
Plans
Health improvement
plans are about identifying high-risk factors, and preventing or
slowing disease progression and encouraging individuals through
education and one-on-one behavioral health coaching to begin
altering their risky actions.
The types of
behavioral-related high-risk factors addressed by health improvement
programs include high blood pressure, high cholesterol, tobacco
cessation, and weight management. Individuals with known or
potential health conditions may be aware of elevated risks but have
not found the motivation to change. They haven’t experienced any
major hospitalization or serious complications – yet. However,
without some form of intervention, their conditions will likely
progress to a much higher-cost, productivity-limiting chronic
disease.
Disease Management
The goal of disease
management is to empower individuals to effectively manage disease
and prevent complications through adherence to medication regimens,
regular self-monitoring of vital signs and healthful diet, exercise
and other lifestyle choices by education, support and encouragement
of both the physician and the health coach.
For employers, the
cost of chronic disease goes far beyond the direct costs of
healthcare and medical expenses. Absenteeism due to lost wages
amounts to $65 billion annually for American companies. This cost is
compounded by the impact of lost productivity due to workers who are
limited in the amount or kind of work they can do, which can be as
high as 34% of the total workforce. Disease management programs have
proven to not only control health benefit costs but also improve the
overall health and productivity of workplace environments.
The founder of
Monarch Health Promotions, Michelle L. Taylor has been in the
healthcare industry for over 14 years in Tucson, Arizona.
After suffering
from severe asthma throughout her life, she is especially committed
to respiratory disease prevention and management services. She also
believes that the psychological and social burdens of chronic
illness can be minimized through patient, caregiver and community
education.
Michelle is a
registered respiratory therapist, a nationally certified asthma
educator, and a certified tobacco cessation specialist, as well as a
certified health coach. She has collaborated with The American Lung
Association, The American Cancer Society, and The University of
Arizona as a speaker, volunteer, and an educator in her chosen
field.
Michelle has also
worked in specialty pharmaceuticals for many years, educating area
hospitals, pulmonologists, allergists, neurologists,
anesthesiologists, and psychiatrists on the best pharmacological
choices and treatment options available for their patients.
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