Publication | Closed Access
Change in Health Risks and Work Productivity Over Time
161
Citations
22
References
2004
Year
Work ProductivityHealthy Work EnvironmentWorker HealthPreventive MedicineSocial HealthWellness ProgramWorking ConditionsPublic HealthHealth SciencesRisk ChangeHealth PolicyHealth WorkforceHealth PromotionRiskHealth EconomicsWorkforce DevelopmentWork-related StressHealth BehaviorOccupational DisorderUnemployment
We sought to examine the relationship between changes in health risks and changes in work productivity. Pre- and postanalysis was conducted on 500 subjects who participated in a wellness program at a large national employer. Change in health risks was analyzed using McNemar chi-square tests, and change in mean productivity was analyzed using paired t tests. A repeated measures regression model examined whether a change in productivity was associated with a change in health risks, controlling for age and gender. Individuals who reduced one health risk improved their presenteeism by 9% and reduced absenteeism by 2%, controlling for baseline risk level, age, gender, and interaction of baseline risk and risk change. In conclusion, reductions in health risks are associated with positive changes in work productivity. Self-reported work productivity may have utility in the evaluation of health promotion programs.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1