BHS for Healthcare Delivery Settings

Healthcare workers are injured more on the job than construction workers and any other industry.

Quick Facts:

  • The injury and illness rate in hospitals remains nearly double the rate for private industry as a whole. Occupational Safety Health and Administration
  • Hospitals experienced injuries at nearly 3 times the rate of professional and business services. Occupational Safety Health and Administration
  • Hospital workers encounter unique risks that are uncommon in other industries. Occupational Safety Health and Administration
  • 52% of healthcare delivery injuries are sprains and strains. U.S. Bureau of Labor & Statistics
Safe Patient Handling

Healthcare Delivery work settings include (but not limited to):

  • Hospitals
  • Nursing Homes
  • Home Health
  • Ambulatory Clinics
  • Ancillary Services (pharmacy, lab, radiology)
  • Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation
  • Emergency Services (EMS, etc.)
  • Many others
Safe Patient Handling

The Impact of the Problem

Problem definition: every work activity and setting presents a unique and measurable risk to employees. These risks have an impact on individual health and wellness as well as corporate wellness (profitability, culture, etc.).

Key Drivers of Lost Productivity

Productivity (Indirect Costs)

Lost productivity due to pain costs U.S. companies $297 billion every year (that’s $2397 per employee). U.S. Bureau of Labor & Statistics

Key Drivers of Lost Productivity

Presenteeism: the practice of coming to work despite illness, injury, anxiety, etc., resulting in reduced productivity.

  • Commonly reduces individual productivity by 33% or more. Harvard Business Review
  • Injuries and pain are shown to increase presenteeism 79%. National Institute of Health / National Library of Medicine
  • Pain conditions associated with sitting, like back pain, arthritis, and headaches, cost $47 billion a year in reduced employee performance. Harvard Business Review
  • Overall, presenteeism costs U.S. employers over $150 billion a year due to employees coming to work sick. Center for Health Research Rural Advocacy
  • Presenteeism is potentially the single largest contributor to medical errors costing 251,000 lives a year. National Library of Medicine
Key Drivers of Lost Productivity
Empty Medical Office Absent Workers
Empty Medical Office Absent Workers

Absenteeism: missing work due to injury, illness, travel for offsite care, or without good reason.

  • Annual costs due to unscheduled absenteeism of healthcare workers is $3.9 billion.
    Forbes Magazine
  • U.S. employees go to 558 million doctors’ office visits and spend 1.1 billion hours away from work due to pain alone. U.S. Bureau of Labor & Statistics
  • Overtime is used to cover 47% of employee absences and coworkers are 29.5% less productive when covering for absent employees. Society for Human Resource Management
  • Supervisors spend 212 hours per year dealing with absences. Society for Human Resource Management
  • MSDs accounted for 44.1%  of all healthcare workplace injuries with 51.8% affecting the lower back resulting in 8,730 days away from work. U.S. Bureau of Labor & Statistics
  • Lost workday injuries for healthcare workers (166.3 per 10K) is more than 5 times the average for all industries (30.5 per 10K). Occupational Safety and Health Administration
Key Drivers of Health Care Costs

Direct Costs

$171 billion annually ($1,100 per employee) in direct employer expenses incurred as a result of workplace injuries and illnesses.
U.S. National Safety Council

Key Cost Drivers

Healthcare Costs: include employer wellness programs costs, insurance premiums, and other direct compensation for healthcare benefits (HSA/FSA, etc.).

  • U.S. employers cover an average 70% (that’s $10,762) of healthcare costs for each employee every year.
    National Business Group on Health
  • The average annual cost of healthcare is $15,375 per U.S. employee and inflating 6.5% every year.
    National Business Group on Health
  • Employers spend $49 billion per year ($742 per employee) on wellness programs. Global Wellness Institute
  • Small to Medium businesses pay 8-18% more for employee healthcare insurance. National Conference of State Legislatures
Key Drivers of Health Care Costs
Employee Turnover Costs Employers Time and Money
Employee Turnover Costs Employers Time and Money

Employee Turnover: voluntary and involuntary employee attrition costs employers an immense amount of time and money.

  • The average cost to (re)hire is $4,129 and takes an average of 42 days. Society for Human Resource Management
  • Turnover can cost employers 33% of an employee’s annual salary. Forbes Magazine
  • In 2020, 47 million Americans will voluntarily change jobs. Society for Human Resource Management
  • U.S. companies spend an average $1,096 to train a new employee. 2018 Training Industry Report
Stacked Graph - Healthcare

Workers’ Compensation: direct costs of workplace injuries and illnesses, and mandatory insurance.

  • Workers’ compensation for musculoskeletal injuries and pain costs U.S employers $20 billion every year. U.S. Bureau of Labor & Statistics
  • The average employer cost of a workplace musculoskeletal injury is $33,000 per claim. Occupational Safety Health and Administration
  • The average cost of workers’ compensation insurance for healthcare companies is $1,009 per employee per year. Workers’ Compensation Lab
Stacked Graph - Healthcare
Pie Graph - Healthcare
Key Drivers of Other Costs

Other Qualitative Costs

Employer costs intuitively associated with poor employee health and wellness, but without a direct correlation to causation argument.

Key Drivers of Other Costs

Reputation: a bad reputation costs companies at least 10% or more per hire. Harvard Business Review

Safety: employers that don’t have effective employee health and wellness programs pay 2-3 times more on injuries and illnesses. Employee Health and Safety Today

Quality: a Gallup Poll revealed that 70% of U.S. workers are not engaged at work leading to mistakes that cost U.S. companies 20-40% of sales. Six Sigma

Culture: 91% of workers at companies led by leaders that support well-being efforts say they feel motivated to do their best at their jobs. American Psychological Association

Patient Safety: 91% of workers at companies led by leaders that support well-being efforts say they feel motivated to do their best at their jobs. American Psychological Association

Key Drivers of Other Costs

The Bottom Line of a BHS Customized Health Assurance Program

The Bottom Line of BHS Customized Health

In Your Perfect World...

The ideal healthcare delivery company is not only a “Great Place to Work”, but also profitable and safe where employer sponsored programs are affordable, BEST-IN-CLASS, and effective.

How to Get There...

We have revolutionized corporate occupational health through patented, technology-enabled solutions along with proprietary mobility health treatments trusted by professional athletes. Our scalable, customized solutions effectively address the biggest cost drivers to U.S. employers.

The Bottom Line of BHS Customized Health