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RISK FACTOR AUDIT

     

Occupational health, Fitness and Wellbeing Home

n Charter

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Health and fitness

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From injury to dysfunction

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Manifesto

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Model

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Objectives

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Risk factor audit

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Strategy
n Swifties and fallacies
n What we can do for you?
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Ebook presentation:

 

Best Practice in Occupational Health, Fitness and Wellbeing

n The Crookback Proposal

Research indicates that saving money and increasing productivity are achievable, but the organisation must know what its OH&F costs are and have a systematic program to reduce them.

 

An OH&F audit will provide a statistical base for comparing the costs and the benefits of

  •   absenteeism

  •   workers compensation premiums

  •   injuries

  •   rehabilitation programs.

 

It's relatively easy to quantify the costs of absenteeism and the workers' compensation. Presentism is a tougher assignment.

 

A reasonable absentee rate for a large organisation is three days absence a year for each employee through dys-ease and dysfunction. If it is a higher rate then there is a health and fitness problem.


In many organisations it's a lot more than three days off per person per year, and at about $200 a day to employ someone, the cost, though often hidden, mounts up.

For instance if you had a staff of 500 people and they all had a day off the cost would be $100,000. If they all took 10 days off a year the figure would jump to $1m.

WHAT'S THE CAUSE?
As to the reason why people are taking excessive amounts of time off, there's many of them: -

 

people not in the right job or being miles away from the job they really want to do.

 

 

Lack of autonomy

 

 

poor front line management - particularly lack of interest, lack of
regular feedback, an inadequate appraisal system, and managers wanting to get on with their work.

 

 

staff bludging and pulling swifties, particularly on Mondays and
Fridays

 

 

lack of personal development

 

 

lack of career development

 

 

family life disruption

 

 

low levels of health, fitness and vitality. You'd be amazed at the
number of people who come to work tired, haven't slept well, get frequent headaches and migraines, are anxious and depressed, put up with excruciating musculo-skeletal pain, have abdominal pain ...You can appreciate why they take a day off now and then.

 

 

...


The good news is that these problems are eminently fixable.

WHAT CAN YOU DO ABOUT IT?

 

1.

Get your HR data base working for you so you can get figures at the push of a button.

 

 

2.

Train your front line managers to become better managers. That's often where the problem starts. Keep stats on absenteeism by section so you can identify small problems before they become big problems. Talking to people about their health each time they're away and not standing for the nonsense of taking Monday's and Fridays off is something managers are paid to do.

 

 

3.

Get front line managers to watch the statistics every month, like a hawk, ready to pounce when they suspect someone is pulling a swiftie, and ready to help when someone needs help.

 

 

4.

Conduct an occupational health and fitness risk audit. If people are unfit and unhealthy it will pay to invest company money to  help get them in better shape. They'll feel good and so will you.

Miller Health conducts occupational health and fitness audits. In fact we're leaders in the field.

 

 

5.

Run some health management programs that are mandatory for all staff to attend. If they're not mandatory the people most at risk won't attend. Let staff know that you believe health is as important as safety.

How much should you allocate from your budget each year? A good starting point is the cost of one day's absenteeism for all staff - ie number of staff multiplied by $200.

 

 

6.

Run career development, and personal development programs for all staff. Career and personal challenges strike at all levels within organisations. If you don't make sessions mandatory, the people most in need of support won't come.

 

 

7.

Bring your employee assistance program provider in to give introductory talks and encourage people to use their services. Encourage EAP staff to spend time each week wandering around, getting to know your staff and booking appointments for those who want them.

 

 

8.

Give the strongest encouragement to people at risk (particularly of musculo-skeletal dysfunction) to attend regular training programs. You want them to get better and you're prepared to move heaven and earth to help them - in work's time at work's expense.

 

 

9.

Set a goal for the average number of days off per person this year. It could be one or more days less than last year. Remember, you want a dividend from your investment. You'd be as pleased as punch if you met your target.

 

 

10.

Keep the score. In some organisations they still have a board out the front with a record of how many days it was since there was a lost time accident. You can do something similar by having a score board with the number of absences so far this month.

 

 

11.

Reward the people and sections who are fit and healthy. Fit and healthy people are your most valuable asset.

 

 

12.

Make the distinction between injury and body system dysfunction. The body is an eco-system. When people are not fit and healthy a whole lot of body systems start to become dysfunctional, including the mind. The most common symptoms of poor health in the workplace are musculo-skeletal pain and stress.

Most of the cases of musculo-skeletal dysfunction I see aren't injuries, they're dysfunctions caused by lifestyle neglect. People aren't strong or flexible enough to tap a key board or push a pen without getting a crook back, stiff neck, frozen shoulder and RSI. Blaming work is a swiftie.


OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH AND FITNESS (OH&F) RISK AUDIT
Miller Health can help you conduct an occupational health and fitness audit and let you know the risk you're running due to low levels of health and fitness. Low levels of fitness and health go with a high absenteeism rate. They also go with a high presenteeism rate, where people come to work but productivity is down due to all the 'background noise'.

Why occupational health and fitness? Well it's a big ask in our culture expecting to stay healthy without keeping yourself fit. The greatest threat to health in a modern office environment is people sitting down for the 2000 minutes a week they used to move around.

Get your staff moving - make it a part of the culture. Introduce the 10,000 steps program. Encourage people to stand up while they work - if you've got a raised platform on your desk you can still type standing up. Rearrange the chairs during the day so people are not sitting on the same sort of chair all day - get some fitballs and Balans chairs to share around during the day. Put on some yoga, tai chi, Pilates, Body Balance and Crookback Clinic sessions.

MIND AND BODY PROFILE
One of the best measures of presenteeism and risk of absenteeism is the Mind and Body profile. Click here to try it out for yourself online.

THE OH&F SURVEY
If you've got some spare minutes and want to go on a confidential data base from which I can feed back industry comparisons, just let me know the following details.

 

1.  Number of staff

.............

 

 

2.  Total number of days off for

 

     •     sickness with a doctor's certificate

.............

     •      sickness (and sickies) without a doctor's

 certificate

.............

     •      looking after sick family members

.............

     •      days people on workers comp were away

.............

TOTAL

.............

 

 

3.  Workers compensation premium

$............

 
NOW ASK WHAT WE CAN DO FOR YOU?
If you click on the link you'll be able to view the programs, assessments and audits that we conduct, the aim of which is to inspire and motivate your staff to keep themselves fit and healthy to the best of their ability.

If you want more info, or you'd like me to make some sample presentations, send me an email

In the mean time stay tuned, highly tuned.

John Miller