Managing Diabetes In The Workplace
Unfortunately, diabetes is increasing across the U.S. at an alarming rate. According to the Diabetes Research Institute, 34.2 million individuals, or 10.5% of the U.S. population, have diabetes. Diabetes is a chronic (long-lasting) health condition that affects how your body turns food into energy. Your body breaks down most of the food you eat into sugar (or glucose) and releases it into your bloodstream. When your blood sugar increases, it signals your pancreas to release insulin. Insulin acts as a key to letting the blood sugar into your body’s cells for use as energy. If you have diabetes, your body doesn’t make enough insulin or can’t use it as well as it should. If there isn’t enough insulin or your cells stop responding to insulin, blood sugar builds up and stays in your bloodstream. Over time, this build-up can cause serious health problems, such as heart disease, vision loss, and kidney disease.
Alongside diabetes, hypertension, or high blood pressure, is a common disease among employees. Nearly half of the adults in the U.S. (47%, or 116 million) have hypertension. Hypertension is when your blood pressure, the force of blood flowing through your blood vessels, is consistently too high. The main way that high blood pressure causes harm is by increasing the workload of the heart and blood vessels, making them work harder and less efficiently. Over time, this force and friction of high blood pressure damage the delicate tissues inside the arteries.
Your Responsibility As A Business Owner
Chances are high that you have employees with diabetes. As a business owner, it’s your job to ensure your employees feel safe and comfortable in their work environment and, ultimately, outside of work. For employees that have health conditions such as diabetes, it’s even more important to ensure they have everything they need should an emergency take place. You must create a supportive culture for your employees with diabetes and create health benefits that include a more personalized approach to their care. Giving your employees access to affordable care and tools is essential to attract and retain the talent you need. The following are practices you can take to create a safe environment for employees who have diabetes:
- Create a private or dedicated space for blood glucose monitoring or insulin delivery
- Have on-site educational programs that promote awareness of diabetes
- Offer workday flexibility for employees that need to make in-person or virtual health appointments
- Promote a healthy workplace by encouraging and supporting health-related activities throughout the day (taking walks, adding a workout area in your building, offering gym membership reimbursement, and more)
- Offer healthy and diabetic-friendly snacks and meals
When you help your employees who suffer from this disease, it can ultimately help save your company money in health care costs, increase productivity, and reduce absenteeism. Providing your employees with the resources they need to achieve their wellness goals can, in turn, improve your bottom line.
Diabetic Management With GMS
At GMS, we understand how challenging it can be to wear multiple hats simultaneously. However, when it comes to your biggest asset, your employees, it’s essential that you do everything you can to make them happy and create a healthy environment. When it comes to employees with a disease such as diabetes, you may have to reconsider what you’re currently doing and determine how you can improve your efforts to support these specific individuals better. When you partner with GMS, you gain access to our diabetic management program as part of our premier employee benefits administration. We help employers and their employees transform their health, change lives, and create new opportunities for everyone through diabetic management with OneDrop. The artificial intelligence-powered program associated with diabetic management adapts to every participant’s specific conditions, including:
- Diabetes
- Prediabetes
- High Cholesterol
- High Blood Pressure
Through OneDrop, it supports individuals on their journey to better health by providing diabetes testing supplies and blood pressure monitors. When you offer a diabetic management program to your employees, you’re providing them with the tools to, ultimately, transform their lives. They’ll have access to living healthier lives and regain their time and power. The program provides online health data tracking, health coaching, and other resources to access from anywhere.
“Diabetes is one of the most expensive conditions for employees and their family members, directly impacting employers and productivity. The indirect cost equals $3.3 billion in absenteeism from the workplace, with an average of $26.9 billion annually. Furthermore, living with chronic conditions predisposes people to a greater risk of cardiovascular disease. Multi-condition programs such as OneDrop help make the connection between chronic conditions rather than treating each as a competing health narrative,” expressed Beth Kohmann, Vice President of Benefits at GMS.
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