Employees prefer information more than free food

International Journal of Workplace Health Management,Volume 10, Issue 4, Page 332-342, August 2017. Purpose Nutrition behaviours have been linked to an increased risk of poor health and reduced productivity at work. Therefore, the workplace is a logical setting to implement nutrition-related programmes. Many existing workplace health promotion programmes (WHPPs) employ a standardised approach that typically attracts those who are already healthy or highly motivated to change. Understanding the factors that influence an individual ’s desire to improve health and participate in nutrition WHPP will facilitate the development of highly engaging programmes that appeal to the greatest number of workers. The paper aims to discuss these issues. Design/methodology/approach In all, 881 employees of an Australian mining company par ticipated in a self-report health survey aimed at investigating employee predictors of desire to improve personal nutrition, desire for assistance with improving personal nutrition, and intention to participate in nutrition WHPPs. Findings Overall, females and older employees were most likely to i ntend to participate, with group information sessions garnering the widest appeal to employees. Practical implications The findings suggest that practitioners ought to include a group-based educational component designed to increase awareness particularly to employees who are nutritionally deficie nt and unlikely to voluntarily participate in strategies. Orig...
Source: International Journal of Workplace Health Management - Category: Occupational Health Source Type: research