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Business and disparities in South Carolina SC Business Coalition on Health Board meeting June 16, 2015.

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Presentation on theme: "Business and disparities in South Carolina SC Business Coalition on Health Board meeting June 16, 2015."— Presentation transcript:

1 Business and disparities in South Carolina SC Business Coalition on Health Board meeting June 16, 2015

2 The SC Health Coordinating Council is now the… *Formal announcement will be made on June 23, 2015

3 Some definitions Population health Health Disparities

4 Population Health Health outcomes of the population. Inclusive of the distribution of the outcomes inside the population.

5 Health Disparities Inequalities that exist when members of certain population groups do not benefit from the same health status as other groups. Health disparities are caused by a complex interaction of multiple factors including individual, genetic and environmental risk factors, pervasive structural inequities and social determinants of health.

6 Data Disparities among the employed in South Carolina Disparities among the insured in South Carolina

7 Disparities among the employed Source: BRFSS 2013

8 Disparities among the insured Estimated cost of Prematurity/LBW: $15,000 hospital stay vs $600 for normal birth $51,000 over life time LBW and prematurity CAN be prevented! Source: Vital statistics

9 Why should employers care? National data indicate that over the 10-year period from 2009-2018, the total cost of health disparities will be approximately $337 billion dollars, with $117 billion incurred by private insurers*. Racial and ethnic minorities now comprise roughly one-third of the U.S. population, and are expected to represent a 54% majority by 2050. Employers shoulder the lion’s share of health care costs to cover their employees and families, yet not every enrollee is able to receive the optimal level of health care. Health disparities associated with race and ethnicity persist even minorities have adequate health benefits coverage, equivalent socioeconomic status and comparable co-morbidities.

10 Key stakeholders to solve the problem PeersEmployersCommunities

11 Peer support: a powerful tool decreases morbidity and mortality rates increases life expectancy increases knowledge of a disease improves self-efficacy improves self-reported health status and self- care skills, including medication adherence reduces use of emergency services Additionally, providers of social support report less depression, heightened self-esteem and self-efficacy, and improved quality of life.

12 Scope of influence of the employers Inside the organization – Employees spend 8-10 hours a day at their job – Policy and environmental changes – Incentives Wellness programs Benefit design

13 Scope of influence of the employers In the community/geographic area of influence – The current and future workforce come from these areas – Business leaders are influential in policymaking, and with their peers

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15 Relevance for Wellness Programs A “one size fits all” approach to health and wellness programs does not work because different groups of the population (minorities, lower income jobs, etc) experience stark differences in health conditions and outcomes as well as preventive, diagnostic and treatment services provided.

16 Relevance for Wellness Programs Good health outcomes are a set of products/services you sell, so you can cut your costs – Worksite wellness programs – Chronic disease management programs – Benefit packages You identify your target population (Collect, stratify, and use data!!!) You focus group your populations (Learn from your target population what matters and moves them) You develop products/publicity that resonate with your populations, and often are promoted by people of influence in your target population

17 SC Health Coordinating Council Call to Action for Health Equity For improving health for ALL in South Carolina

18 Health Equity starts in our organization A.Data driven interventions – Identify the groups of the population that require additional support (Checklist section II) B.Cultural competence and responsiveness: – Tailored communication strategies, trust building, empathy (Checklist section IV) – Culturally competent care provision C.Inclusive decision making: – Wellness teams composed of peers of the diverse individuals that you have prioritized – Filling the pipeline!! D.Community engagement: – Identify hot-spots in your area and partner with organizations that can help improve the social determinants in those areas – Leverage business leader influence to improve the health of those areas supplying your workforce

19 The ask Launching partner – SCBCH and members – Pioneer organizations making the commitment to make improvement in the four building blocks of the call to action – Organizations that will advocate for the adoption of the call to action by other organizations – Organizations that commit to share best practices, good contacts, successes and lessons learned to accelerate improvement in health equity in South Carolina. – Confirm by July 31 Peer coaches – Volunteer to be a resource for organizations joining the call to action for one or more of the building blocks

20 Launching partners (6/15/15)

21 Tools for business (National Business Group on Health) Health Disparities Cost Impact Tool Getting started Checklist Case studies Marketing techniques to reach diverse employees Toolkit to reduce health disparities in the workplace Complete disparity resources by the National Business Group on Health Complete disparity resources by the National Business Group on Health

22 Tools to get to know the community http://www.communitycommons.org/maps-data/ Census, BRFSS, Vital Statistics, etc Local community meetings Email agallego@scha.org to brainstormagallego@scha.org


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