|
Exercise Lowers Employers' Health Costs
Companies can save millions in health-care
costs simply by encouraging their employees to exercise a little
bit, researchers reported.
They said obese employees have
higher health-care costs, but lowered those expenses by exercising
just a couple of times a week -- without even losing any weight.
Feifei Wang and colleagues at the
University of Michigan studied 23,500 workers at General Motors.
They estimated that getting the
most sedentary obese workers to exercise would have saved about
$790,000 a year, or about 1.5 percent of health-care costs
for the whole group.
Company-wide, the potential savings
could reach $7.1 million per year, they reported in the Journal
of Occupational and Environmental Medicine.
Of the whole group of workers,
about 30 percent were of normal weight, 45 percent were overweight,
and 25 percent were obese. Annual health-care costs averaged $2,200
for normal weight, $2,400 for the overweight, and $2,700
for obese employees.
But among workers who did no exercise,
health-care costs went up by at least $100 a year, and were
$3,000 a year for obese employees who were sedentary.
But adding two or more days of
light exercise -- at least 20 minutes of exercise or work hard
enough to increase heart rate and breathing -- lowered costs by
on average $500 per employee a year, the researchers found.
"This indicates that physical activity
behavior could offset at least some of the adverse effects of
excess body fat, and in consequence, help moderate the escalating
health-care costs," Wang and colleagues wrote.
Reference
Source 89
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|