Rob Woollen explains the importance of staff wellness in the workplace.
In the current business climate, while board members are well aware of the 'nice-to-have' elements of wellness, the question that must be answered is: 'Will we see a bottom-line benefit, and how will we measure it?' It is telling that accountancy heavyweights PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), experts in locating unwise spending, have a manager devoted to health and fitness.
Last year, the Department of Health and the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) released details of a study commissioned by them and carried out by PwC to determine the return on investment from wellness programmes.
In addition to sick pay, direct costs should include overtime/agency fees for cover.
- Number of employees: 1,000
- Average weekly wage: £400
- Sickness absence rate: 8%
- Total cost of sickness per year: £1,664,000
- Potential cost of scheme: £66,560, or £67 per employee
- Potential savings: £166,400, or £166 per employee.
Consider the additional costs of sickness absence that have not been taken into account. In addition to the direct costs of covering absence, there is the loss of continuity, reduced customer satisfaction and low staff morale that comes with the territory. Add to this the costs of staff attending work while unfit, the potential costs of litigation, and the cost of recruiting new staff when attrition rates are high, and executives and shareholders alike will begin to take note.
Rob Woollen is corporate wellness manager for Rightway Complete Wellness Solutions. E-mail rob@fitforwork.co.uk


Recent comments
23 hours 41 min ago
23 hours 47 min ago
23 hours 58 min ago
1 day 23 hours ago
1 day 23 hours ago
2 days 8 hours ago
2 days 8 hours ago
4 days 5 hours ago
4 days 21 hours ago
5 days 21 hours ago