Worksite Wellness Program Data

What is Worksite Wellness Program data?

Worksite Wellness Program data is information that is collected about your Worksite Wellness Program. All Worksite Wellness Programs should include data as an integral part of the Worksite Wellness Program plan.

Why should you care about Worksite Wellness Program data?

Information tells the Wellness story. Information is the tangible proof of a Wellness Program’s impact.

Building data into Worksite Wellness Programs

Why bother with Worksite Wellness Program Data?

You need Worksite Wellness Program data to:
• Assess whether or not your Worksite Wellness Program is working.
• Answer the ‘so what?’ about the need for a Worksite Wellness Program.
• Offer information to Senior Management about the impact of the Worksite Wellness Program.
• Write a budget justification so you can secure Worksite Wellness Program resources.
• Use Worksite Wellness Program resources efficiently and market your Worksite Wellness Program more effectively.

Where to start collecting Worksite Wellness Program data:
• MAKE A PLAN to collect the data: decide what, when, and how information will be collected.
• Determine what information is ALREADY BEING COLLECTED.
o By way of example: use dairy sales information in the dining center to measure the impact of a milk marketing/dairy month campaign.
• Begin collecting JUST A FEW small pieces of information. Be innovative!
o By way of example: BMI, APFT scores (before & after), tobacco quit rates

IT’S NEVER TO LATE TO START collecting Worksite Wellness Program data.

Innovative Worksite Wellness Program data strategies
• Use local college/graduate students to help collect, input, and analyze Worksite Wellness Program information.
• If your organization has an internship program, get to know the Internship Director. Make use of intern resources – including having the Director and/or interns implement the data collection plan for your Worksite Wellness Program.
• Use information to let senior management know about the Worksite Wellness Programs affect on the employees.

Present this information at their monthly/quarterly meetings.
• Use innovative follow-up strategies to get information. Phone calls can be effective, but also consider email, mailed surveys with return postage provided, and going to the units in person to collect the information.
• Make data collection ‘fun’ for Worksite Wellness Program participants.
o By way of example: use a team approach – the team with the ‘best’ overall results gets some sort of award or recognition.
• ALWAYS relate the impact of your Worksite Wellness Program to readiness.

This entry was posted on Thursday, January 8th, 2009 at 8:17 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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