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Heavier Employees Have Higher Medical Costs, And Take More Sick Days Than Normal-Weight Workers, Rand Study Says
Obese
employees each cost an additional $460 to $2,500 annually in medical
expenditures and work absences compared with normal-weight workers,
according to a new report published in the September/October issue of
the... American Journal of Health Promotion, USA Today reports. For the
study, economists with RTI International, a not-for-profit think tank,
and CDC examined two national surveys that tracked work absences and
medical information on more than 20,000 full-time employees ages 18 to
64. According to the study, obesity costs about $285,000 annually at
companies with 1,000 workers and increased work absences account for
30% of that cost. The study found that normal-weight men miss an
average of three work days annually, compared with five for men who are
60 or more pounds overweight, and that normal-weight women miss an
average of 3.4 work days annually, compared with 5.2 days for women who
are 30 to 60 pounds overweight. Women who are 100 or more pounds
overweight miss an average of 8.2 work days annually, the study found.
In addition, the study found that the average annual medical
expenditure for normal-weight men is $1,351, compared with $1,813 for
men who are 30 to 60 pounds overweight and $3,378 for men who are more
than 100 pounds overweight based on increased medical costs and work
absences. The average annual medical expenditure for normal-weight
women is $1,956, compared with $3,324 for women who are 30 to 60 pounds
overweight and $4,437 for women who are 60 to 100 pounds overweight
based on increased medical costs and work absences, the study found.
Eric Finkelstein, lead author of the study and a health economist for
RTI International, said that the issue requires "a concentrated
effort," adding, "Workplace wellness programs aren't going to have much
effect on people who are already 100-plus pounds overweight." Roland
Sturm, senior economist with RAND, said, "This is more evidence that
obesity is very costly" (Hellmich, USA Today, 9/12).
Online An abstract of the study is available online.
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The Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report is published for
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