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Economic Impact of the Wellness Fitness Initiative

Economic Impact of the Wellness Fitness Initiative. Kerry Kuehl MD DrPH Department of Medicine Oregon Health & Science University. Cost of Injury and Illness.

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Economic Impact of the Wellness Fitness Initiative

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  1. Economic Impact of the Wellness Fitness Initiative Kerry Kuehl MD DrPH Department of Medicine Oregon Health & Science University

  2. Cost of Injury and Illness • In the U.S., total direct and indirect costs associated with work-related injuries and illnesses are > $150 billion or nearly 3 percent of the gross domestic product (Leigh et al., 2000). • Injuries are responsible for the majority of those events, with illness accounting for only 15%. • These costs are three times that of Alzheimer’s disease and nearly equivalent to the costs for cancer.

  3. High Risk Combination • Fire fighters have health risks similar to the average American and their work is more physically demanding • This combination places FF at high risk for heart disease • Leading cause of death fighting fires is heart disease

  4. Risks are similar to other Americans • 65% > 3 cardiac risk factors • 40% > 4 cardiac risk factors • Sedentary lifestyle • High fat diet • Obesity • Dyslipidemia • Diabetes • High blood pressure

  5. Background • The overall economic impact of work-related injuries and illness is high. • Firefighters are an especially high-risk group for musculoskeletal injuries and other work-related health problems. • New means to reduce work-related illness and injury are needed.

  6. 8.6X more injuries among FF than private industry

  7. Most Hazardous Occupation • The fire service is one of the most hazardous occupations. The incidence of work-related injury is eight times that of private industries. • NFPA estimated > 80,000 firefighter injuries occurred in the line of duty in 2005. • This was an increase of 5.6%, and the highest rate since 2002 (Karter & Molis, 2006).

  8. Incidence of FF Injuries • Each year, approximately one-third of the more than one million U.S. firefighters sustain a work related injury. • National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) released a study that estimated the 2002 costs of injuries and efforts to prevent them was from $2.8 billion to $7.8 billion per year (TriData Corporation, 2005).

  9. Balance Sheet:$$ OUT WFI:Screening  Costs of Testing treadmill stress test strength physical exam flexibility laboratory tests pulmonary functions body weight/% fat dietary history mental health Many benefits are long-term and won’t show up on a short term economic analysis.  Costs of Follow up (evaluation abnormal results, injuries during testing) Costs for a Program Balance Sheet: $$ SAVED

  10. Comprehensive Medical • Lipids • Bloodwork • BP • Aerobic Fitness • Lung Function • Strength • Flexibility • Body Comp • Questionnaire

  11. Testing Only

  12. $500-$1000 Dollar Costs per Firefighter for Testing Only treadmill stress test physical exam laboratory tests strength flexibility pulmonary functions body weight/% fat dietary history $250 $100 Full Meal Deal Minus Stress Test Labs & Surveys

  13. What Level of Testing Is Cost Effective? • Cost to diagnose 1 case of hepatitis: $10,000. • Cost to diagnose 1 FF with CHD = $100,000. • Hepatitis: Quality-Adjusted Life Year (QALY) = $10,000 per QALY for Blood Test. • CHD: $100,000 per QALY for Stress Testing. • Standard Index for a Cost-Effective Procedure is < $50,000 per QALY. • Not Cost-Effective to Stress Test all FF.

  14. Follow-up Costs For Abnormal Blood Test – Liver Enzymes To identify 1 case of asymptomatic hepatitis: Total = $ 10,000

  15. Follow-up Costs For Abnormal Stress Tests Total = $305,000 To identify 3 FF who have severe CAD:

  16. Considerations of Test Selection • Additional follow-up costs must be considered when selecting test • In addition to picking the package, consider the risk profile of those being tested • Risk Stratification to identify those at high risk is cost effective (i.e., not cost effective to stress test all FF annually)

  17. Balance Sheet: IN Short Term and Long Term Benefits Of A Wellness Program WHAT IS THE BOTTOM LINE? Preventing Injury Reducing Costs Decreasing Morbidity and Mortality

  18. Business Case For Worksite Wellness • Majority of studies show positive ROI ~ $3 • Negative studies not published • Threats to validity (self selection, low participation, high dropout, effects difficult to measure) • Savings about $250/employee at 4 years • What about the fire service?

  19. Economics of Fire Fighter Wellness • Clearly, in other industries, research supports the cost-effectiveness of worksite wellness • Wellness programs among fire fighters less obvious • One of major roadblocks in preventing fire departments from implementing WFI is concerns about return on investment (ROI)

  20. COST OF MAINTENANCE & REPAIR (Percent of Budget)

  21. Is FF Wellness Cost-Effective? • Phoenix: 6 years after implementing wellness program, severity of injuries decreased by 46%. • Wichita: 50% reduction in sick leave after implementing fitness program. • South Pasadena: Injury rates reduced over 50% after wellness program introduced. • PHLAME program in Oregon (retrospective)

  22. Injury rates among PHLAME and Non-PHLAME fire bureaus

  23. FD Savings From Reduced Injuries As Compared to 1999 2001 2002 Cost Savings/FF $1353 $1600 Total (687 FF) $929,511 $1,100,200

  24. IAFF Awards OHSU Grant To Review Economic Impact of Wellness Fitness Initiative • In 2006-2007, the original 10 cities WFI task force fire departments contacted • Site visits with HR and RM to review data availability diversity, and complexity • 8 departments collected long term data with accessible computer data base • Retrospective study and data analysis

  25. Outcome Data • Data represents aggregate or average of 4 WFI and 4 Non-WFI fire departments with no ability to identify individual FD claims • Occupational Injury/Illness Claims • Total Incurred Costs • Number of Lost Work Days (LWD) • Average Cost Per Claim

  26. RESULTS • The mean total claims, lost work days, and total incurred costs represent service or occupational benefits paid per fiscal year for a department. • Data from these fire departments do not include any non-occupational claims and costs due to difficulty with tracking this information through private insurance and individual medical providers.

  27. Occupational Claims Between WFI and Non-WFI Departments *Statistically significant at p<.05

  28. Total Incurred Cost* Between WFI and Non-WFI Departments *Health care costs increased 7% annually past decade

  29. Lost Work Days* Between WFI and Non-WFI Departments *Some departments had lost hours or did not have lost time calculated

  30. Average Cost Per Claim Between WFI and Non-WFI Departments* *Calculated from Total Incurred Cost divided by Number of Claims

  31. DISCUSSION - COSTS • Total incurred costs increased $82,900 per year per WFI department and increased $1,419,435 per Non-WFI fire department per year (adjusted to 2001 dollar amounts). • A difference of $1,336,535 per year was saved per WFI fire department as compared to Non-WFI department.

  32. CONCLUSION • The information presented suggests there is an immediate reduction of occupational injury/illness claims and costs among fire departments that implemented the IAFF/IAFC Wellness Fitness Initiative as compared to fire departments that did not implement the WFI.

  33. CONCLUSION • The results also demonstrate that the WFI fire departments have a lower rate of increasing claims and costs while decreasing lost work days and average cost per claim. • The fact that lost work days and average cost per claim are reduced suggests that injury/illness severity is reduced, especially in the face of rising healthcare costs greater than the rate of inflation.

  34. CONCLUSION • Adoption of the WFI confers a savings in the short term. • Long-term economic benefit will be greater by addition of a health promotion program through prevention and early treatment of fire fighter musculoskeletal injuries, cancer, and cardiovascular disease

  35. LIMITATIONS Limitations of this study: • Retrospective • Data in various sizes, shapes, missing data • Dosage effect and participation rate varied • Further research with prospective study needed to answer this question of economic benefit of fire fighter wellness.

  36. FUTURE DIRECTIONS • We have submitted a grant to CDC and NIH in cooperation with the IAFF of a health promotion/injury-reduction program for firefighters utilizing PFT’s with WFI. • The proposal builds on prior NIH-funded behavior change research with firefighters including a cost-effective analysis

  37. PROSPECTIVE STUDY • In addition to workman’s compensation and absenteeism claims, we also will track intervention costs, which might be referred to as opportunity costs, or the costs that would be avoided by forging the intervention. • Those include direct cost of the program, salary of labor inputs (interventionists, scheduling personnel), program materials, and management inputs. • Addition of PHLAME Behavioral component

  38. THANK YOU!

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