Part I: Setting the Context
Chapter 1: Population Health Management at the Worksite
Nicolaas P. Pronk, PhD, FACSM
Chapter 2: Employee Health Promotion: A Historical
Perspective
R. William Whitmer, MBA
Chapter 3: Workplace-Based Health and Wellness Services
Raymond Fabius, MD, CPE, and Sharon Glave Frazee, PhD
Chapter 4: State of the Worksite Health Promotion Industry:
The 2004 National Worksite Health Promotion Survey
Laura A. Linnan, ScD, CHES
Chapter 5: Health Promotion Programming in Small, Medium,
and Large Businesses
Heather M. Bowen, MS, RD, LD; Todd D. Smith, MS, CSP, ARM; Mark G.
Wilson, HSD; and David M. Dejoy, PhD
Chapter 6: Employee Health Promotion: A Legal
Perspective
Alison Cline Earles, Esq, and Luann Heinen, MPP
Chapter 7: Health Care Policy and Health Promotion
John M. Clymer, AB; Garry Lindsay, MPH, CHES; Jennifer Childress,
MS, CHES; and George J. Pfeiffer MSE
Chapter 8: The Case for Change: From Segregated to
Integrated Employee Health Management
Ann Yaktine, PhD, and Mike Parkinson, MD, MPH
Part II: The Evidence for Employer-Sponsored Health
Programs
Chapter 9: An Introduction to Evidence on Worksite Health
Promotion
Jonathan E. Fielding, MD, MPH, MBA, and David P. Hopkins, MD,
MPH
Chapter 10: The Assessment of Health Risks With Feedback:
Results of a Systematic Review
Robin E. Soler, PhD; Matt Griffith, MPH; David P. Hopkins, MD, MPH;
and Kimberly Leeks, PhD, MPH
Chapter 11: Practice and Research Connected: A Synergistic
Process of Translation Through Knowledge Transfer
Nicolaas P. Pronk, PhD, FACSM
Chapter 12: Benchmarking and Best Practices in Worksite
Health Promotion
Jessica Grossmeier, MPH; Lavaughn Palma-Davis, MA; K. Andrew
Crighton, MD, CPE; Margaret Sabin, MHSA; and David R. Anderson,
PhD
Chapter 13: Health and the Organization of Work
David Gimeno, PhD, and Benjamin C. Amick III, PhD
Chapter 14: Health and Productivity Management: An
Overview
Joseph A. Leutzinger, PhD
Part III: Assessing Worker and Organizational Health
Chapter 15: Practical Program Evaluation: Ensuring Findings
Are Used for Program Improvement
Thomas J. Chapel, MA, MBA, and Jason Lang, MPH, MS
Chapter 16: The Assessment of Health and Risk: Tools,
Specific Uses, and Implementation Processes
Edward M. Framer, PhD, and Yosuke Chikamoto, PhD
Chapter 17: Organizational Assessment for Health
Thomas Golaszewski, EdD
Chapter 18: Assessment Tools for Employee Productivity
Nicolaas P. Pronk, PhD, FACSM
Chapter 19: Calculating the Economic Return of Health and
Productivity Management Programs
Seth Serxner, PhD, MPH, and Daniel Gold, PhD
Chapter 20: Using Claims Analysis to Support Intervention
Planning, Design, and Measurement
David H. Chenoweth, PhD, and Jeff A. Hochberg, MS
Part IV: Program Design and Implementation
Chapter 21: Organizing Intelligence to Achieve Increased
Consumer Engagement, Behavior Change, and Health Improvement
Stephanie Pronk, MEd
Chapter 22: The Application of Behavior Change Theory in the
Worksite Setting
Karen Glanz, PhD, MPH
Chapter 23: Keeping Healthy Workers Healthy: Creating a
Culture of Health
Shirley Musich, PhD; Howard Schubiner, MD; and Timothy Mcdonald,
MSHA
Chapter 24: Connecting the Program to Core Business
Objectives
Steven P. Noeldner, PhD
Chapter 25: Addressing Diversity and Health Literacy at the
Worksite
Antronette K. (Toni) Yancey, MD, MPH; A. Janet Tomiyama, MA; and
Nicole Keith, PhD
Chapter 26: A Culture of Health: Creating and Sustaining
Supportive Organizational Environments for Health
Nicolaas P. Pronk, PhD, FACSM, and Calvin U. Allen, MBA, CHIE
Chapter 27: Online Communities and Worksite Health
Management
Neal Sofian, MSPH, and Daniel Newton, PhD
Chapter 28: Rewarding Change: Principles for Implementing
Worksite Incentive Programs
Jeffrey J. VanWormer, MS, and Nicolaas P. Pronk, PhD, FACSM
Chapter 29: eHealth for Employee Health and Wellness:
Optimizing Plan Design and Incentive Management
David K. Ahern, PhD; Lauren Buckel; Edward W. Aberger, PhD; and
Michael J. Follick, PhD
Chapter 30: Effective Programs to Promote Worker Health
Within Healthy and Safe Worksites
Glorian Sorensen, PhD, MPH, and Lisa Quintiliani, PhD
Chapter 31: Programs Designed to Improve Employee Health
Through Changes in the Built Environment
Mireille N.M. van Poppel, PhD, and Luuk H. Engbers, PhD
Chapter 32: The Design, Implementation, and Evaluation of
Medical Self-Care Programs
Don R. Powell, PhD, and Jeanette Karwan, RD
Chapter 33: Disease Management for Employed Populations
Dennis Richling, MD
Chapter 34: From the Basics to Comprehensive Programming
Mary Kruse, ATC
Part V: Case Studies
Chapter 35: The Occupational Athlete: Injury Reduction and
Productivity Enhancement in Reforestation Workers
Delia Roberts, PhD, FACSM
Chapter 36: Employee Health at BAE Systems: An
Employer–Health Plan Partnership Approach
N. Marcus Thygeson, MD; Jason Gallagher, MBA; Kathleen Cross, CANP;
and Nicolaas P. Pronk, PhD, FACSM
Chapter 37: Health Promotion, Participation, and
Productivity: A Case Study at Unilever PLC
Peter Mills, MD, and Jessica Colling, BSC, MSC
Chapter 38: Introducing Environmental Interventions at the
Dow Chemical Company to Reduce Overweight and Obesity Among
Workers
Ron Z. Goetzel, PhD; Jennie Bowen, MPH; Ronald J. Ozminkowski, PhD;
Cheryl Kassed PhD, MSPH; Enid Chung Roemer, PhD; Maryam J. Tabrizi,
MS, CHES; Meghan Short, BA; Shaohung Wang, PhD; Xiaofei Pei, PhD;
Heather M. Bowen, MS, RD, LD; David M. Dejoy, PhD; Mark G. Wilson,
HSD; Kristin M. Baker, MPH; Karen J. Tully, BS; John M. White, PhD;
Gary M. Billotti, MS; and Catherine M. Baase, MD
Nicolaas P. Pronk, PhD, is the vice president of health management at HealthPartners in Bloomington, Minnesota, the largest consumer-governed, nonprofit health care organization in the nation. He is also senior research investigator at HealthPartners Research Foundation and health science officer of JourneyWell, a Minneapolis-based nationwide provider of health and wellness programs.
Pronk has 20 years of experience in the health promotion field as a researcher, developer, and administrator of health promotion programs and services. Since 1993 he has directed health improvement initiatives that involve a systems approach to generating health across multiple sectors, including business and industry. He is a member of the distinguished Task Force on Community Preventive Services, an independent panel supported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which presents evidence-based recommendations to the health field.
A member of the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM) since 1984, Pronk served as section editor and contributor for the first edition of ACSM's Worksite Health Promotion Manual. He currently serves as associate editor for the ACSM's Health & Fitness Journal. He served as the chair for the ACSM Interest Group on Worksite Health Promotion until 2008, when it morphed into the International Association for Worksite Health Promotion (IAWHP), an ACSM affiliate society. Pronk is a founding member and inaugural president of the international board of directors for the IAWHP. Previously, he was a board member of the former Association for Worksite Health Promotion (AWHP).
Pronk and his wife, Stephanie, reside in Eagan, Minnesota. He enjoys spending time with his family and dogs, watching English Football Association soccer after a Saturday-morning run, and riding his Harley on country roads in the Minnesota northland.
ACSM advances and integrates scientific research to provide educational and practical applications of exercise science and sports medicine.
The American College of Sports Medicine, founded in 1954, is a professional membership society with more than 20,000 national, regional, and international members in more than 70 countries dedicated to improving health through science, education, and medicine. ACSM members work in a wide range of medical specialties, allied health professions, and scientific disciplines. Our members are committed to the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of sport-related injuries and the advancement of the science of exercise.
Our members' diversity and expertise make ACSM the largest, most
respected sports medicine and exercise science organization in the
world. From astronauts and athletes to people with chronic diseases
or physical challenges, ACSM continues to look for and find better
methods to allow people to live longer and more productive lives.
ACSM is leading the way in exercise science and sports
medicine.
ACSM reaches professionals and the public through a variety of
means:
-ACSM publishes periodicals such as Medicine & Science in Sports &
Exercise, Sports Medicine Bulletin, Exercise and Sport Sciences
Reviews, ACSM's Health & Fitness Journal, Current Sports Medicine
Reports, and the online consumer newsletter ACSM Fit Society
Page.
-The ACSM Web site, www.acsm.org, serves as a portal to research,
information, and professional development resources.
-Meetings present the latest scientific research and practical and
clinical applications as well as fitness techniques and public
health issues.
-Through media outreach, ACSM experts provide accurate,
evidence-based insight into sports medicine, exercise science, and
health and fitness.
-Books, pamphlets, and other publications present consumer advice,
standards and guidelines for practitioners, and other definitive
iinformation.
“The second edition of this comprehensive handbook is a welcome addition to the field of worksite health promotion… [It] provides an excellent foundation to help guide health promotion professionals and students with an interest in worksite health promotion to craft interventions to improve workforce health and wellness; and to improve their understanding of the key issues involved in supporting and expanding worksite health and wellness programs. Highly recommended.” CHOICE (Current Reviews for Academic Libraries)
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