A longitudinal study on the relationship between weight loss, medical expenditures, and absenteeism among overweight employees in the WAY to Health study.

Eric A Finkelstein, Laura A Linnan, Deborah F Tate, Peter J Leese
Author Information
  1. Eric A Finkelstein: Health Services and Systems Research Program, Duke NUS Graduate Medical School, Singapore. eric.finkelstein@duke-nus.edu.sg

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To quantify the extent to which successful weight loss among overweight/obese employees translates into subsequent savings in medical expenditures and absenteeism.
METHODS: This analysis relied on medical claims and absenteeism data collected from overweight/obese employees at 17 community colleges in North Carolina.
RESULTS: We find no evidence that participants achieving at least a 5% weight loss experienced reduced medical expenditures or lower absenteeism during the 12-month weight loss intervention or in the subsequent 2 years.
CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that a quick return on investment from weight loss programs, even effective ones, is unlikely. Nevertheless, as with other employee benefit decisions, the decision about whether to offer weight loss programs should take into account many factors, such as employee health, in addition to the potential for a quick return on investment.

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Grants

  1. R01 DP000102/NCCDPHP CDC HHS
  2. R01 HL080656/NHLBI NIH HHS
  3. R01 HL080656-02/NHLBI NIH HHS
  4. R01-DP000102/NCCDPHP CDC HHS

MeSH Term

Absenteeism
Adult
Cost-Benefit Analysis
Female
Health Benefit Plans, Employee
Health Care Costs
Health Promotion
Humans
Longitudinal Studies
Male
Middle Aged
North Carolina
Occupational Health Services
Overweight
Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
Regression Analysis
Surveys and Questionnaires
Universities
Weight Loss
Workplace

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0weightlossmedicalabsenteeismemployeesexpendituresamongoverweight/obesesubsequentquickreturninvestmentprogramsemployeestudyOBJECTIVE:quantifyextentsuccessfultranslatessavingsMETHODS:analysisreliedclaimsdatacollected17communitycollegesNorthCarolinaRESULTS:findevidenceparticipantsachievingleast5%experiencedreducedlower12-monthintervention2yearsCONCLUSIONS:resultssuggesteveneffectiveonesunlikelyNeverthelessbenefitdecisionsdecisionwhetheroffertakeaccountmanyfactorshealthadditionpotentiallongitudinalrelationshipoverweightWAYHealth

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