MINNEAPOLIS, Dec. 10, 2015 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- RedBrick Health, a leading provider of technology-enabled enterprise solutions that empower individuals to improve their health behaviors and make smarter healthcare decisions, has published the results of its 2015 National Employer Survey on Health Engagement. In follow-up to a similar 2010 national survey, this study explores how definitions and predictors of health engagement have evolved over the last five years, specifically looking at trends in program designs, engagement rates and definitions of success.
For employers, the healthcare environment has changed dramatically since 2010. The implementation of the Affordable Care Act places new requirements on employers around health coverage, and creates new regulatory frameworks for employee wellness initiatives. And with an increasingly competitive U.S. job market, employers are using comprehensive health benefits to attract and retain high-caliber employees. In light of these changes, RedBrick reassessed the role of employee health and well-being with the 2015 study, resulting in evidence that—for many employers—employee health and well-being have gone from "nice to have" to "need to have."
"The findings from this study suggest that employee health and well-being have come of age," said Dan Ryan, chief executive officer of RedBrick Health. "Employers are linking these initiatives to broader corporate goals, increasing funding and accountability, and shifting how they define engagement—from 'clicks' to greater alignment of attitudes and health behaviors."
Overall, the 2015 National Employer Survey on Health Engagement found that employers are offering more program elements and setting higher expectations around what engagement means. Several findings from this research are highlighted below:
- Program goals have grown up since 2010. A higher proportion of respondents in 2015 cited goals tied to corporate performance—such as employee satisfaction and productivity—as well as engagement and ROI. Program investment levels increased since 2010 as well.
- Employers are raising the bar on engagement. More 2015 respondents defined engagement as incorporating healthy attitudes and behaviors into daily living, rather than simply participating in programs, suggesting a more sophisticated understanding as well as higher expectations.
- Increased choice is producing stronger results. The 2015 survey found that employers who offer more health engagement choices reported higher satisfaction with overall employee engagement.
- More employers are looking to reward outcomes with higher incentives. Premium reductions, gift cards and HSA deposits continue to dominate as reward types. Average total reward levels are up, and 60% of employers surveyed report they use or are likely to use outcome-based incentives in the next year.
The National Employer Survey of Health Engagement, conducted by independent research firm SNG Research Corporation, surveyed 202 human resource decision-makers from multiple industries. These individuals represented self-insured companies with at least 1,000 employees, and performed organizational roles in health benefits and wellness and health management.
View the complete results of the study at www.redbrickhealth.com/results/white-papers/.
More information on RedBrick for Employers can be found at: redbrickhealth.com/solutions/employers, or by contacting [email protected].
About RedBrick Health
RedBrick Health provides technology-enabled enterprise solutions that empower individuals to improve their health behaviors and make smarter healthcare decisions. The company serves leading employers, health plans and healthcare delivery organizations focused on improving population health and reducing healthcare costs. Using its powerful behavior change model and dynamic heath engagement platform, RedBrick delivers a personalized and engaging experience through online, mobile and live interactions with consumers. Visit RedBrick at RedBrickHealth.com, read more at the Health Innovation Blog, or follow the company on Twitter or LinkedIn.
Media Contact
Alexandra LaManna
415-277-4905
[email protected]


Australia Flags Child Safety Gaps at Apple, Meta, Google Over Online Sexual Extortion
Goldman AM Sees Strong Buyout Opportunities in Japan, South Korea and Australia
Genesis Minerals to Acquire Vault in A$5.6 Billion Deal After Regis Withdraws
Samsung Chairman Lee Jae-yong Expected to Meet Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang on AI and Chip Partnership
SoftBank Corp Partners With Sierra to Expand AI Customer Support Across Japan
TSMC Q2 Revenue Surges 36% as AI Chip Demand Powers Growth Ahead of Earnings
SK Hynix Shares Drop After Strong Nasdaq Debut Despite $26 Billion ADR Listing
Apple Sues OpenAI, Former Employees Over Alleged Trade Secret Theft
Levi Strauss Raises 2026 Outlook After Q2 Earnings Beat, Shares Drop Despite Strong Results
Elon Musk Says Anthropic Leads AI Race as Claude Models Challenge OpenAI
DOJ Grand Jury Investigates UAW President Shawn Fain Ahead of Union Election
Mastercard Explores Sale of Majority Stake in UK Payments Firm Vocalink: Report
Paramount-Warner Bros. Discovery Merger Faces Lawsuit From 12 States
Deutsche Bank Fined A$2 Million by ASIC Over OTC Derivatives Reporting Errors
SK Hynix Prices Record U.S. ADR Offering at $149 After $200 Billion Investor Demand
Yaskawa Electric Shares Slide as Weak Profit Overshadows Strong AI Demand
Samsung to Launch First Yongin Chip Plant by 2029 as South Korea Speeds Up Semiconductor Hub 



