Build flexibility into your Employee Health and Wellness Program.
Posted by Health Screening | Posted in Wellness Program | Posted on 29-11-2008
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Think ahead: what unexpected challenges might come up as you implement your Employee Health and Wellness Program? How could you adapt and change the Employee Health and Wellness Program to meet those challenges?
• Consider the “what if’s?”
• What if your classroom space is suddenly no longer available?
• What if you can’t hold the Wellness Fair 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 Employee Health and 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 staff members 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 Employee Health and Wellness Program
• Get participant feedback while the Employee Health and Wellness Program is ongoing. Then be ready to adapt to those suggestions.
• By way of example, if kids in a pediatric obesity Employee Health and Wellness Program fight the idea of completing physical excercise logs, then get a verbal summary of their activity for the week instead.
• Simplify Employee Health and Wellness Program
• If part of your Employee Health and 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 Employee Health and 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, Employee Health and Wellness Program materials were made into a excercise guide.


Employee Health Screening