Humana Uncovers Wellness Trends to Help Employers Create a Happier, Healthier Workplace

Understanding and assessing five trends – an aging population, financial well-being, mindfulness, sleep, the ‘connected experience 2.0’ – will help employers make decisions to drive employee wellness

LOUISVILLE, Ky.--()--Workers are getting older, sleepier and increasingly worried about their finances while they rely on mindfulness and emerging technology to help them achieve their desired health. This is the state of wellness according to the 2017 Humana Wellness Trends Report, released today by health and well-being company Humana Inc. (NYSE: HUM).

The report guides and counsels employers on the five most relevant current and emerging wellness-related challenges at the top of employees’ minds this year, while offering ways to make wellness programs more inclusive and holistic.

Humana Wellness uncovered trends that represent a comprehensive range of current topics significantly impacting the world of wellness: an aging population, financial well-being, mindfulness and sleep. One trend – the connected experience 2.0 – predicts how the intersection of emerging technology and health data will reshape how employees approach wellness.

It also discusses how addressing these trends can help reduce costs. This is pivotal for employers at a time when health care costs, which account for an average 7.6 percent of an organization’s budget, continue to increase.

“Workforce wellness goes beyond simply addressing physical health and nutrition,” said Kristine Mullen, Vice President, Wellness and Strategy at Humana. “With the 2017 Humana Wellness Trends Report, we’re unveiling the wellness factors that keep employees up at night, including financial and emotional security. By understanding employees’ everyday challenges and needs, employers can take definitive actions to jumpstart or enhance their wellness strategies, make a significant difference in their employees’ lives and drive down health care costs.”

The “connected experience 2.0” revolutionizing wellness strategies

The “Internet of things,” referring to everyday devices connecting to the internet and transmitting data with interconnected systems, is an emerging concept continually linked to health and wellness. This connected experience is beginning to amplify beyond wearable fitness trackers. As wellness programs begin to integrate these devices and employers gain access to the data, employers will gain insight into what’s driving organizational health costs and how to resolve them.

Older workforce leads to health, caregiving burdens

The U.S. workforce is getting older and retiring later due to the stress of financial burdens, caring for older loved ones and increasing health care costs. About 14.5 percent of the U.S. population was aged 65 years or older in 2014, and that number will rise to 21.7 percent by 2040.

Financial stress affects productivity

Americans identify money as their top stressor, which can reduce employee productivity and contribute to absenteeism, presenteeism and poor health. Research states 37 percent of full-time employees deal with financial issues while working, affecting businesses’ bottom lines in the long run.

Poor sleep leading to errors, low morale

Among workers age 30 and older, 74 percent say lack of sleep affects their work performance. Additionally, poor sleep can cause workers to struggle with processing and remembering information, become prone to errors and accidents and experience lower morale.

Workers benefit from mindfulness techniques

Research has found a mindful approach may help ease the “effects of stress, anxiety and other negative emotions.” A number of organizations have adopted mindfulness techniques to boost productivity and improve mental health among their employees.

For the full 2017 Humana Wellness Trend Report, which provides best practices and tips in relation to each of the trends, visit http://trendsreport.infonowweb.com. To learn more about how to start or enhance your own wellness strategy and address the wellness trends that are top of employees’ minds in 2017, visit humanawellness.com.

About Humana

Humana Inc., headquartered in Louisville, Ky., is a leading health and well-being company focused on making it easy for people to achieve their best health with clinical excellence through coordinated care. The company’s strategy integrates care delivery, the member experience, and clinical and consumer insights to encourage engagement, behavior change, proactive clinical outreach and wellness for the millions of people we serve across the country.

More information regarding Humana is available to investors via the Investor Relations page of the company’s web site at www.humana.com, including copies of:

  • Annual reports to stockholders
  • Securities and Exchange Commission filings
  • Most recent investor conference presentations
  • Quarterly earnings news releases and conference calls
  • Calendar of events
  • Corporate Governance information

About Humana Wellness

The Humana Wellness set of programs and services, including Go365TM, our Goal GuruTM challenges and digital coaching platform, EAP and Work-Life Services, health coaching, biometrics, and on-site health promotion consultants (to name a few), enables people to live happier, healthier lives through personalized, simple solutions that inspire and motivate them. Our comprehensive suite of solutions, serving more than 29 million members, is grounded in behavior change science and is designed to deliver trackable, verifiable results.

Contacts

Humana Corporate Communications
Ross McLerran, 210-617-1771
rmclerran@humana.com

Release Summary

Humana Uncovers Wellness Trends to Help Employers Create a Happier, Healthier Workplace

Contacts

Humana Corporate Communications
Ross McLerran, 210-617-1771
rmclerran@humana.com