Friday, June 26, 2009

CDC Introduces Web site to Help Combat Obesity and Reduce Health-related Costs

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recently unveiled LEANWorks!, a Web site designed to help businesses address obesity.  LEAN stands for Leading Employees to Activity and Nutrition.  The new Web site was announced at a National Business Group on Health meeting in Washington, D.C.
"CDC LEANWorks! was developed in direct response to organizations asking CDC for help in addressing the obesity epidemic.  Specifically they wanted to know what interventions were effective in helping employees maintain a healthy weight," said William Dietz, M.D., Ph.D., director of CDC's Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity.  "CDC has identified science-based interventions that work to prevent and control obesity.  CDC LEANWorks! provides the tools that employers need to take action."
The free Web site was developed particularly for small and mid-size companies, which typically have more limited resources to devote to obesity prevention efforts.  However, the tools and resources available on CDC LEANWorks! can benefit companies of any size.  CDC LEANWorks! can help employers calculate the cost of obesity for their organizations and develop tailored approaches to help control these costs through interventions such as fitness classes, lunchtime health education sessions, weight management programs, and more.
The Web site provides a variety of resources to employers including:

An obesity cost-calculator where employers can input employee demographic data to estimate the total costs associated with obesity and determine annual obesity-related medical costs for their companies.
Information and resources to help employers plan, build, promote, and assess interventions to combat obesity.
Information on how employers can estimate return on investment, a measure of the cost of an intervention compared to the expected financial return of the intervention.

Obesity is a risk factor for high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, stroke, and heart disease.  Obese individuals spend 77 percent more money for necessary medications than non-obese persons. 
"Obesity affects more than just health care costs. It also has a significant impact on worker productivity because the more chronic diseases employees have, the more likely they are to be absent from work, or less productive if they come to work sick," said Janet Collins, Ph.D., director of CDC's National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion. 
Because organizations do not usually publish information about their work site programs in the scientific literature, CDC visited select businesses to identify promising work site obesity prevention and control practices.  The CDC LEANWorks! Web site provides case studies from some of those businesses to provide examples of successful work site obesity prevention programs.
"Workplace obesity prevention programs can be an effective way for employers to reduce obesity and lower their health care costs, lower absenteeism and increase employee productivity," said Dr. Dietz.  Employers may also see other indirect benefits when they implement these programs such as improved employee morale, increased worker retention, and improved recruitment of new employees."
Source: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 
CDC Introduces Web site to Help Combat Obesity and Reduce Health-related Costs

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