Total Worker Health®: Are You Looking at the Full Picture?

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Total Worker Health®: Are You Looking at the Full Picture?

March 29, 2023

Wednesday 1:00 p.m.-2:00 p.m. ET

What’s next for worker safety, health and well-being? Dr. L. Casey Chosewood, leader of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health’s Office for Total Worker Health®, headlined this session on the future of workers’ compensation and workforce well-being. We surveyed the macro trends putting pressure on workers today, examined learnings from the Total Worker Health® program and discussed how employers can lead with engagement of frontline managers. Travelers’ Allen McCalister joined the conversation with over two decades of Risk Control operations experience leading Corridor of Care®, Travelers’ signature approach to pre- and post-injury management. He provided critical learnings into who could be influencing employees before, during, and after an injury and how to pro-actively manage these business risks.  

Presented by the Travelers Institute, the Master's in Financial Technology (FinTech) Program at the University of Connecticut School of Business, the MetroHartford Alliance and the Insurance Association of Connecticut.

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Summary

What did we learn? Here are the top takeaways from Total Worker Health®: Are You Looking at the Full Picture?

Work has changed forever. Earning a living looks completely different now than it did in years and decades past. “Even before COVID, how we work, what we do for work, the role it’s playing in our lives was already changing. COVID accelerated these changes, and it’s unlikely that things are going to go back,” Dr. Chosewood shared. These changes include roles that once existed but don’t anymore, people who aren’t returning to the workforce in a post-COVID world, and the concept of essential workers.

There are record levels of stress in the workplace. “Today, some Americans are still in survival mode,” Dr. Chosewood said. Stress levels are high because of factors like inflation, politics, family care dynamics and more. He told us that 84% of workers said their workplace conditions had contributed to at least one mental health challenge, and he added that 81% of workers are looking for workplaces that support their mental health. This increased focus on mental health creates opportunities for employers to further support their employees as a part of encouraging their overall health.

Jobs could potentially improve employee health. Because employees spend so much of their time on the job, Dr. Chosewood emphasized the importance of focusing on employee health. “Total Worker Health starts with workplace safety and invests in better working conditions and improving the practices, policies and programs that you offer to workers so that their health actually improves as an outcome of employment,” he said. Establishing this emphasis is beneficial to employers because health impacts how employees show up to work every day. Placing greater emphasis on good employee health could have a positive impact on everything from reducing healthcare costs to improving customer service, he said.

Managers play a key role in improving employee health in the workplace. Frontline managers play an important role when it comes to supporting good health among their employees. Dr. Chosewood even argues that a frontline manager can have more influence over a person’s health than their own physician. “It’s a pretty dramatic statement,” shared Dr. Chosewood, who served as a family physician for 10 years. “The day-in, day-out influence that I, as a physician, had over the lives of my patients had no comparison at all to the day-in, day-out influence of the conditions of work they faced … largely influenced by the frontline manager.”

Dr. Chosewood emphasized that companies should invest in frontline managers’ skills so that they know how to recognize a struggling employee and when to intervene to help a struggling employee. McCalister agreed and added that “engagement is critical, and managers really need to focus on two-way communication. Oftentimes, managers are accustomed to directing, but they need to learn listening skills as well.” He added that the Travelers Corridor of Care® pre- and post-injury management approach is one example of how to teach frontline managers how to be more responsive to injured employees.

There is a growing expectation of meaningful work. Workers are looking to take pride in what they do for work and who they work for. “People want to feel like they belong in their workplace, that they have a purpose for being there, that they are accepted and warmly appreciated, not only by supervisors, but also by their peers. People want to feel like their job is making a difference,” Dr. Chosewood noted. He provided several focus areas and intervention ideas that boost engagement in the workplace, including establishing a social purpose and providing employee recognition. An increased sense of engagement can help employees feel connected at work through a stronger sense of belonging.

Speakers 

L Casey Chosewood
L. Casey Chosewood

MD MPH, Director, Office for Total Worker Health®, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

  Allen McCalister     
Allen McCalister
Director, Workers Compensation Cost Containment, Risk Control, Travelers

Host

Joan Woodward headshot
Joan Woodward
President, Travelers Institute; Executive Vice President, Public Policy, Travelers


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