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January 2025 Volume 23, Number 1 | |||||
Does Your Wellness Program Need an Inclusion Check-Up?Wellness programs aim to improve employee health and well-being. But many miss the mark on inclusivity, potentially doing more harm than good by alienating swaths of the workforce. Experts say now is the time for employers to take a hard look at their offerings to ensure programs nurture all employees. Rethinking Wellness Program Goals and Messaging Typical wellness challenges focus narrowly on physical fitness and weight loss, premised on assumptions that employees aren’t active or fit enough. This narrative fails to recognize that health encompasses much more than diet and exercise habits. Often this approach can shame and deter the very employees such programs aim to help.
Checking Programs for Built-In Biases
Before advertising yet another step challenge, employers may want to determine whether their current offerings accommodate people across the spectrum. Do activities include modifications for various abilities, disabilities, and fitness levels? Have organizers considered how medical conditions—both visible and invisible— may limit participation? What about economic barriers inherent in certain sports?
Promoting Optional Participation
Mandating involvement in wellness initiatives frequently backfires. Employees pressured to join fitness competitions or hit health metrics can feel singled out or ashamed if unable to meet goals. Stress over forced participation compounds if workers fear reprisals.
Prioritizing Inclusivity in Program Facilitators Many organizations hire external partners to orchestrate wellness programs. Experts emphasize that employers must confirm third-party instructors or that facilitators receive training on leading inclusive, accessible sessions.
Offering Broad Programming to Attract All Employees
B Wellness programs shouldn’t just be about scheduling Zumba classes at lunch. Truly inclusive offerings incorporate activities that align with a variety of interests and not just physical pursuits such as team sports or 5Ks.
Surveying Employees to Continuously Improve
The path to inclusive wellness requires regularly checking in with employees to assess their evolving needs and interests. Anonymous surveys and focus groups yield candid input on how current offerings hit or miss the mark.
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