Build flexibility into your Worksite Wellness Program.

Think ahead: what unexpected challenges might come up as you implement your Worksite Wellness Program? How could you adapt and change the Worksite Wellness Program to meet those challenges?

• Look at the “what if’s?”

• What if your classroom space is suddenly no longer available?
• What if you can’t hold the Health and Wellness in the usual place?
• Have a ‘Plan B’ (or even Plan C or Plan D) in mind for when the “what if’s” happen.

• Build a team that can help with the Worksite Wellness Program

• Who else could teach the health education class if the regular instructor cancels at the last minute?
• Know what areas of expertise your staff has besides their ‘main’ job. By way of example, find out who has excercise instructor credentials besides just the physical therapist.
• Don’t wait for a crisis before you build a network of individuals that you can call on.

• Be ready to roll your sleeves up

• Jump in to fill a gap if you need to.
• YOU may have to help restock the milk case in the dining center when the Dairy Month ‘Milk Mustache’ contest results in increased sales during lunch.

• Be willing (and ready) to respond to feedback about the Worksite Wellness Program

• Get participant feedback while the Worksite Wellness Program is ongoing. Then be ready to adapt to those suggestions.
• By way of example, if kids in a pediatric obesity Worksite Wellness Program fight the idea of completing exercise logs, then get a verbal summary of their activity for the week instead.

• Simplify Worksite Wellness Program

• If part of your Worksite Wellness Program is not working, try making that part less complicated.
• By way of example, if getting follow-up information is not going the way you planned, then make the process to get information easier OR decrease the number of pieces of information that you collect.

• Use lemons to make lemonade

• What do you do when the Worksite Wellness Program doesn’t turn out exactly as you planned? Look for what did turn out. Often, the ‘unexpected outcomes’ produce positive results.
• By way of example, one installation’s database to collect sick call data was made obsolete by a regional system. However, the installation database was able to be used in a different way to track vaccination information that improved delivery of care to Employees.
• At another installation, world events halted a new physical training program. Instead, Worksite Wellness Program materials were made into a excercise guide.

This entry was posted on Wednesday, January 14th, 2009 at 8:24 am and is filed under Wellness Programs. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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