The Cost of Asthma to Employers
The Cost of Asthma to Employers
Cancer, diabetes, heart disease and musculoskeletal issues are often the
conditions employers are most eager to tackle, and we don’t blame them – these
are conditions that cost employers billions of dollars year after year. But
many times, employers crunch the numbers, come up with preventive measures, and
they’re still not seeing the decrease in spend they’re hoping for. Where do
they look next?
According to the national statistics, a huge proportion of the young workforce
suffers from asthma – it impacts one in 13 of your employees. It’s often seen
as a disease that just needs to be managed with drugs, rather than treated at
the root cause.Owing to the rising pollution every year, allergies are on the
rise every year by 1 percent, hence asthma also increases.
It’s big spending. Do you have a handle on its impact within your
organization?
Three ways asthma is impacting your organization
1. Look at your spend
According to the national statistics, several millions of dollars are spend
on medical costs. These costs come from items including:
Medications
Treatments
Emergency visits
2. Lost productivity
When asthma symptoms are severe, many employees are forced to miss work
when they have exacerbations – absenteeism. Others suffer through their asthma
symptoms at their desk, but perform with lower quality – presenteeism. This
loss in productivity can be one of the hardest hits for an organization – leading
to an estimated several million lost workdays.
Most often, asthma is treated symptomatically; sufferers take medications
and use short-term control measures to feel better temporarily. The side
effects from these measures can make it difficult to perform their job, too
3. Quality of life
Most importantly, asthma impacts employees and their quality of life.
Symptoms of asthma can be:
Wheezing
Shortness of breath
Frequent respiratory infections
Cough (often at night or during exercise)
Chest tightness
Irritated throat
Those with asthma are often stuck indoors during their difficult seasons,
shelling out money out of pocket for OTC medications, unable to do many of the
activities they wish they could. They miss work due to sickness and
appointments, or struggle to give it their all at work. There’s an option to
tackle the root cause of the disease.
Three ways to change it
1. Understand the connection
between asthma and allergy
Studies show that 56.3% of patients have asthma caused by allergy. Asthma
is chronic inflammation of the airways, and that 56.3% can attribute the cause
of their inflammation to an allergy to pollen, dust, mold, or other
environmental allergies.
2. Treat the underlying
allergic cause of asthma with allergy immunotherapy
Allergy drops are a form of immunotherapy, like allergy shots, that
gradually help your body build tolerance to the substances that cause your
allergies. For those with allergic asthma, asthma symptoms are drastically
reduced after tackling the root cause of the underlying allergy.
A recent Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality review found that
“sublingual immunotherapy improves asthma symptoms, quality of life and FEV1
[Forced Expiratory Volume], and reduces the use of long-term control medications.
It may also reduce the use of quick-relief medications.”
3. Sick children under your
health plan can ramp up costs for years to come; By intervening on allergies early in childhood, research shows that the
allergic march can be halted – the progression of allergy to conditions like
asthma, food allergies, eczema, sinusitis, and more, can be eliminated – along
with a lifetime of associated costs suffering.
If you’re an employer, broker, onsite or near-site clinic that’s interested
in implementing custom allergy diagnostics and treatment, get in contact with
our implementation team to learn more. We work with you to determine the impact
of allergy and asthma within your organization, and streamline allergy testing
and custom allergy drop immunotherapy that has shown to impact a variety of
conditions – asthma, eczema, sinusitis, and more – as well as the high costs
that accompany them.
Comments
Post a Comment