Tag: workplace health % safety

Building a Culture of Wellness by Fostering a Healthy and Financially Secure Workforce

Photo by RDNE Stock project

By James White, Sales Director at Turnberry Management Risk Solutions

Celebrating Corporate Wellness Awareness Week by highlighting the vital role that companies play in fostering employee health and well-being is not just a matter of timing; it’s a matter of necessity. A healthy workforce is a productive workforce, and a focus on wellness goes beyond just physical health.

This is particularly relevant given that the magnitude of medical expenses has shifted over the years. While common illnesses like influenza pose a threat, the bigger concern lies in hospital stays and unexpected medical procedures. These events can leave employees with significant financial burdens, impacting their well-being and productivity.

The role of employers in mitigating costs

While encouraging healthy lifestyles through fitness programmes and mental health support is vital, ensuring financial security in the face of unforeseen medical expenses is equally important. Employers play a significant role in ensuring their workforce has access to adequate healthcare. Traditionally, medical aid cover has been a common employment benefit, but rising costs have made it less affordable for some employers and their employees. Nevertheless, employers can still help by offering their people assistance through:

  • Understanding medical aid options: A knowledgeable broker can guide employers through the complexities of medical aid options. This includes explaining the benefits, limitations, and potential shortfalls associated with each plan.
  • Considering primary healthcare: For employees who cannot afford comprehensive medical aid, primary healthcare plans are short-term insurance products that offer access to doctors, specialists, and medication, often with capped benefits for private hospital visits.
  • Offering gap cover: Gap cover bridges the gap between medical aid payouts and the actual costs charged by specialists and hospitals, acting as a financial safety net to provide peace of mind for employees facing unforeseen medical expenses.

Common unforeseen medical expenses

  • Hospital stays: These can be particularly expensive, with costs varying depending on the condition and treatment required.
  • Specialist charges: Specialists often charge above the rates covered by medical aid plans, leaving patients with significant bills.
  • Emergency room visits: Even a seemingly minor trip to the ER can result in a hefty bill.

Addressing misconceptions about medical aid

Many employees believe that medical aid offers complete coverage. Brokers can help dispel this myth by explaining the intricacies of the available plan options, such as co-payments, network restrictions, and shortfalls. Some plans limit coverage to specific hospitals or providers, and employees need to be aware of these restrictions to avoid surprise costs, while certain medical aid plans require co-payments for specific procedures or medications, leaving employees with out-of-pocket expenses. Even with medical aid, specialists’ fees often exceed the amount reimbursed and gap cover addresses these shortfalls.

Financial security boosts workplace wellness

By offering (and even subsidising) a combination of medical aid, primary healthcare options, and gap cover, employers can significantly improve the well-being of their people. This is because financial security in the face of medical emergencies will reduce stress and boost morale. Employees with peace of mind regarding healthcare costs are more likely to be happy, productive, and less prone to absenteeism.

However, such assistance is more than simply offering access to such benefits. Employers need to ensure that their workforce can make informed decisions about the healthcare benefits available to them by partnering with a qualified broker. The broker can fulfil a vital educational role by conducting informative workshops to explain medical aid options and limitations and advocate for the value of gap cover.

It makes business sense to invest in a healthy workforce

By prioritising a holistic approach to employee wellness that encompasses both physical and financial health, companies can create a thriving workplace environment. Offering a more comprehensive benefits package that includes access to gap cover demonstrates a commitment to employee well-being, ultimately leading to a happier, healthier, and more productive workforce.

About Turnberry Management Risk Solutions

Founded in 2001, Turnberry is a registered financial services provider (FSP no. 36571) that specialises in Accident and Health Insurance, Travel Insurance, and Funeral Cover.

With extensive experience across healthcare and insurance industries in South Africa, Turnberry offers unsurpassed service to Brokers and clients. Turnberry’s gap cover products are available to clients on all medical aid schemes, as they are independently provided and are therefore transferable in the event of a change in the client’s medical aid scheme.

Turnberry is well represented nationally, with its Head Office based in Bedfordview, Johannesburg with Business Development Managers in Cape Town and Durban. The Turnberry Team’s focus on outstanding client service comes from having extensive knowledge and experience in the financial services sector and is underwritten by Lombard Insurance Company Limited. Lombard Insurance Company Limited is an Authorised Financial Services Provider (FSP 1596) and Insurer conducting non-life insurance business.

Men’s Health Awareness Month: Supporting Men’s Health in the Workplace

To mark Men’s Health Awareness Month, International SOS, the world’s leading health and security risk services company, emphasises the importance of creating supportive workplace environment that foster men’s health and mental wellbeing.

Men’s health remains a significant concern and poorer health profiles for men than for women have been reported, with discrepancies found in metrics including life expectancy, mortality rates, disability-adjusted life years, and non-sex-specific disease death rates.The World Health Organization (WHO) reports that non-communicable diseases (NCDs), are claiming around 74% of all lives lost each year2, and in 2018, NCDs and injuries accounted for 86% of all male fatalities.3

The WHO data shows that men across all socioeconomic groups demonstrate unhealthier smoking practices, unhealthier dietary patterns, higher alcohol consumption levels and higher rates of injuries than women.3 In fact, among the global population that used tobacco in 2020, a significantly higher percentage were men (36.7%), compared to women (7.8%).4 These statistics highlight the need to focus on improving men’s health and organisations can play a vital role in enhancing men’s health within their workplaces.

Men are significantly less likely than women to seek preventive care services, which can often lead to undiagnosed conditions.1 Men are also found to be less likely to have received mental health treatment than women. The stigma attached to illness and men perceiving illness as a weakness are often found to be the reasons why men are not as vocal about their health and mental wellbeing concerns.5

Dr Anthony Renshaw, Regional Medical Director at International SOS, said “Men’s Health Awareness Month provides a crucial opportunity for organisations to re-evaluate their approach to supporting the health and wellbeing of male employees. In addition to physical health, we must also prioritise mental health, as it has a direct impact on overall productivity and workplace satisfaction. Employers can play a pivotal role in fostering open discussions, reducing stigma, and promoting a supportive environment for men to seek the help they may need.”

International SOS offers guidelines for organisations to provide workplace support specific for men’s health and wellbeing with the ‘H-O-P-E’ approach:

  1. Hold workplace men’s forum that can act as a safe space. Having a supportive work environment where everyone, particularly men, know that they are allowed the time to address any health concerns is extremely enabling.
  2. Offer male-specific confidential support from mental health professionals.
  3. Provide your team leads with appropriate training to enable them to spot early signs of poor physical and mental health and know where they can signpost their employees to.
  4. Encourage employees to have regular health check-ups, particularly screening for early detection and treatment of NCDs, as well as a mental health assessment if needed.
  1. The World Journal of Men’s Health | Changing Men’s Health: Leading the Future
  2. World Health Organization (WHO) | Noncommunicable Diseases fact sheet
  3. World Health Organization (WHO) | Men’s Health fact sheet
  4. World Health Organization (WHO) | Tobacco fact sheet
  5. National Institute of Mental Health | Men and Mental Health