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Pepsi plant offers on-site health care

September 12th, 2008 No Comments   Posted in General

Employees at Pepsi Bottling Group in Richland don’t have far to go for professional medical help.

The new Health and Wellness Center is staffed every weekday by a physician assistant at the 167 Allenbill Drive plant.

“Working through Johns Hopkins University, we can provide noncritical care to all our employees,” plant Manager Steve Mullen said.

About 350 Pepsi employees can get basic tests, physicals and routine exams at no cost, Mullen said.

“The intent is to promote normal maintenance we don’t do,” he said.

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Companies offering on-site health care

September 2nd, 2008 No Comments   Posted in General

Like so many other companies, Cardone Industries Inc. in Northeast Philadelphia was struggling with the cost of its workers’ health care.

Too many of its 4,000 employees, a melting pot of immigrants from dozens of countries, lacked primary-care doctors. Rather than deal with problems early, they’d wait until they were really sick, then head for emergency rooms, the priciest place to get health care. On top of that, a small but growing number of workers was turning down the company’s health insurance plan because it was too expensive.

In response, Cardone is trying a new twist on an old approach to employee health that is quickly gaining popularity among large employers around the country.

It’s bringing back the company doctor.

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Corporations make room for clinics

January 10th, 2008 No Comments   Posted in Whole Health

Corporations struggling to stem the rising tide of health care costs are providing on-site medical services that used to be found only in doctors’ offices and hospitals.

The National Business Group on Health recently released a survey on the prevalence of on-site clinics among U.S. employers with more than 1,000 employees. Of those surveyed, 23 percent reported offering on-site medical services in 2007, while 29 percent plan to offer a program next year.

“These clinics are also an opportunity to provide services in a more cost-effective way,” said Helen Darling, president of the Washington lobbying group. “They will have limited services, and the patient won’t get a lot of extra costly services, which the employer would have had to pay for.”

A recent Kaiser Family Foundation survey found that the premiums businesses pay for their workers’ health care have increased 78 percent since 2001. But creating a medical facility is not exactly a cheap solution to the problem, so the trend is predominantly found among large employers.

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The Doctor Is In-House

January 5th, 2008 No Comments   Posted in CHD Meridian

Tom Hopkins was at work when he felt the pain in his chest and abdomen. It seemed minor, but the health professionals at his company’s on-site wellness center urged him to go to the hospital, where doctors found problems with his heart.

Two days later, Hopkins underwent coronary artery bypass surgery. Now enjoying a healthy recovery, he credits the worksite clinic with saving his life.

“If it wasn’t for the clinic, I probably would not have gone to the doctor right away, and who knows what would have happened,” says Hopkins, manager of the Central Florida Market Unit of the Pepsi Bottling Group, in Orlando, Fla.

Stories like Hopkins’ are becoming more common as businesses increasingly adopt a new approach to the old model of employer-sponsored health benefits. Reminiscent of the “company doctor” of years past, today’s trend of providing on-site medical care is building rapidly, experts say, spurred largely by the fact that these on-site facilities enable employers to better manage—and even scale back the growth rate of—their health care expenses.

“I think it’s a modern model that is indeed proving to be cost-effective,” says Sean Sullivan, president, CEO and co-founder of the Institute for Health and Productivity Management, a nonprofit corporation in Scottsdale, Ariz., that works to link employee health to corporate performance. “Not only does it pick up health issues earlier, but it doesn’t require time away from work and at the same time creates a culture of caring.”

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Company Clinics Cut Health Costs

January 14th, 2007 No Comments   Posted in CHD Meridian, CHS, IMC Healthcare, Whole Health

Frustrated by runaway health costs, the nation’s largest employers are moving rapidly to open more primary care medical centers in their offices and factories as a way to offer convenient service and free or low-cost health care.

Within the last two years, companies including Toyota, Sprint Nextel, Florida Power and Light, Credit Suisse and Pepsi Bottling Group have opened or expanded on-site clinics. And many employers are adding or planning to add even more clinics, which were experimented with about 30 years ago but fell out of favor amid questions about their cost-effectiveness.

Today a new wave of clinics is opening, driven largely by a motive that was less of a factor in the past: employers’ desires to reduce their health insurance premiums by taking care of workers before they need to see outside doctors. More than 100 of the nation’s 1,000 largest employers now offer on-site primary care or preventive health services — a number forecast to exceed 250 by the end of the year, according to David Beech, a health benefits consultant.

Corporate America’s new in-house medical offices go well beyond traditional occupational health clinics that hundreds of factories have long maintained for job-related injuries and worker’s compensation cases. Employees can now stop by for check-ups, allergy and flu shots, pregnancy tests or routine monitoring for chronic diseases like diabetes and asthma.

When prescription drugs are required, some employers arrange for the pills to be delivered the next day at the office or plant, while others even maintain fully stocked pharmacies.

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