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The Next Stage of Evolution of Workplace Wellness:
A World Economic Forum/World Health Organization Collaboration
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The World Health Organization (WHO) and the World Economic
Forum (WEF) held a meeting in Dalian China on
September 5-6, 2007 to advance the cause of making workplace
wellness a global priority. This meeting was historic for two
reasons.
First, the WHO has traditionally paid little attention to
wellness/health promotion or the workplace. Its focus has been
on the very important work of providing access to primary
medical care, eradicating infectious diseases, and providing
people with basic survival resources. Its focus has been on
health issues in third world nations. Many of its talented staff
have had a long standing commitment to wellness, and some formal
health promotion structures and programs have been in place for
years. Wellness has just not been a priority. One of my
colleagues who left WHO after years of frustration with failures
to elevate the importance of wellness told me they should change
the name of the organization to the “World Disease
Organization.” From my perspective as an outsider, the shift
toward wellness seemed to have strong momentum when WHO
published the landmark document The World Health Report
2002–Reducing Risks, Promoting Healthy Life under the
leadership of Derek Yack, Executive Director, Noncommunicable
Diseases and Mental Health, and Christopher Murray, Executive
Director, Evidence and Information for Policy. This report made
a compelling case that chronic diseases were the leading cause
of death globally and documented the clear link between
lifestyle and chronic disease.1 Derek Yack has taken
this work a step further in making visible the case our
profession has recognized for decades–that the workplace is an
excellent venue to reach a large portion of the population of
the world, even in developing nations. In addition to helping
developed nations cope with the scourgeof physical inactivity and
the obesity epidemic, they hope to be able to help developing
nations prevent both these problems from occurring in the first
place. When WHO concludes that wellness is a viable strategy,
health leaders will take notice.
Second, the WEF has traditionally paid little attention to
health, let alone the virtually invisible concept of wellness.
WEF has traditionally focused on major social trends that will
shape the global economy. The WEF2 is an intriguing
organization. The vast majority of the world’s population has
never heard of it. To illustrate this, in the past few months, I
have told several dozen of my professional colleagues that I
would be going to a meeting of the World Economic Forum. The
reaction was the same from all but three: “What is the World
Economic Forum?” The three who did not respond that way were all
CEOs of large companies, and their response was the same: “How
did you get invited?” They asked because the WEF is the classic
old boys’ club. Most of the people who attend its meetings are
heads of state and CEOs of major corporations. I was invited
only because of this special collaborative meeting with the WHO.
It’s the first meeting I have attended that had a half mile
security corridor around the meeting venue and was held in a
city that spent several hundred million dollars to finish
construction projects in time to host the meeting. The WEF is
interested in workplace wellness because its members are
recognizing the crippling economic impact of skyrocketing
medical costs on business and nations, have long understood the
relationship between productivity and profit, and acknowledge
the link between tobacco use, obesity, nutrition, and physical
activity and those economic outcomes. Of course the most
significant fact is that the members of the WEF have the ability
to mobilize the resources of the governments of the world and
the major businesses in those nations, because they are the
people who run these governments and businesses.
Our collaborative meeting included a series of highly
interactive brainstorming sessions on how to advance this issue
to the next level and discussions of several papers commissioned
for the meeting. Papers that summarized the quality of the
evidence supporting workplace wellness drew the same conclusions
we have trumpeted for years: There is compelling evidence on the
link between lifestyle, medical conditions, and medical costs;
persuasive evidence that some programs do indeed improve health,
reduce costs, and enhance productivity; and very little evidence
on what works best.
The next step for the WHO-WEF collaboration is to present its
case for adoption of workplace wellness as a global priority at
the January 2008 meeting in Davos Switzerland. If this platform
is adopted, workplace wellness will move to a new stage of
evolution.
Michael P. O'Donnell, PhD, MBA, MPH
References
- The World Health Report 2002 – Reducing Risks, Promoting
Healthy Life http://www.who.int/whr/2002/en/. Accessed
9/14/2007
- World Economic Forum. http://www.weforum.org. Accessed
9/14/2007
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