Provides data around health behaviors, disease statistics, productivity, and risk prevalence in your aggregate or employer-specific population—compared to national statistics and HealthMedias book of business data.
Shows weekly, monthly, quarterly, or yearly participation activity for each intervention.
Compares year-over-year risk prevalence and movement using Dee Edingtons work to understand the cost impact of various numbers of health risks.
Comprehensive data mining performed by HealthMedia Ph.D.s to demonstrate your clinical utility and ROI.
A web-based, ad-hoc application that puts participant data in your hands 24/7 to better understand the dynamics of your population(s) and program outcomes.
Professionally packaged PowerPoints that highlight prevalence data, productivity impairment, program outcomes, and participant satisfaction for all your HealthMedia interventions.
Combines prevalence rates with productivity data (WPAI Questionnaire) to calculate both lost productivity, projected productivity gains, and ROI for your population.
Contains data for incentive eligibility, claims analysis, clinical studies and follow-up intervention programming—provided directly to you or your third-party administrators.
ESTABLISHING MEASURES OF
EFFECTIVENESS IS AT OUR FOUNDATION
In the beginning of HealthMedia, Vic Strecher, our Founder & Chief Science Officer, demanded outcomes. With over 30 years in the field of scientific research, Vic knew that HealthMedias success would need to be rooted in establishing sound measures of program effectiveness. Outcomes that are peer-reviewed, justified, proven, and guaranteed.
HealthMedia had the confidence that our interventions would produce results—and that's precisely what happened. Today, we package these proven outcomes in reporting formats that are unmatched in the marketplace.
Contact us to learn more about the four ways we measure outcomes and the intelligent information we can provide for you.
Using longitudinal data comparing HealthMedia program participants versus non-HealthMedia program participants, we compare and analyze medical utilization and cost-impact.
RCTs compare people who enrolled in a HealthMedia intervention against people who enrolled in another type of online program. These studies measure efficacy, medical utilization, and overall health plan satisfaction.
Time 1 Time 2 is used to measure the movement of the number of health risks for people who used a HealthMedia intervention. This data is then overlaid onto Dee Edingtons work to understand the cost impact of various number(s) of health risks.
This method measures behavior change, productivity improvement, and program satisfaction at 30, 90, and 180 days for all HealthMedia program participants.