GWI’s ‘Future of Wellness at Work’ Report Will Be Released Next Week

The GWI’s 2016 research report,  “Future of Wellness at Work” will be available next Wednesday (2.17). This in-depth study includes new data on the state (and cost) of unwellness for the global & U.S. workforces, while predicting how work itself, and workplace wellness approaches, will change dramatically in the future. Also being released: a white paper on key findings from a GWI/Everyday Health survey of American workers, shedding new light on whether current workplace wellness program are working, and identifying strategies that would make a surprising impact.

Clinical Wellness Best Practices Becomes GWI Initiative

The wellness industry has been around for more than half a century, but gaining credibility within the medical community has been hard won. But increasingly, wellness approaches are being adopted by some of the world’s most respected medical institutions: from large, multidisciplinary hospitals to complex-care specialty facilities. Yet, the work of these pioneers is not well known. So, the new GWI Clinical Wellness Best Practices Initiative seeks to: 1) research and publicize wellness departments in medical settings 2) identify clinical wellness “best-practices” and 3) evaluate/rate the world’s leading clinical wellness centers.

To Prevent Back Pain, Forget Orthotics and Back Belts – Exercise Instead

A large majority of people will suffer serious back pain in their lives, but few studies have examined what really works to prevent it…and what doesn’t. A recent meta-review of studies shines new light: education on its own, orthotics/shoe insoles and back belts provided zero prevention against lower back pain – but exercise’s preventive effect was significant. No matter what kind of exercise program, it basically halved the likelihood of another back pain episode within the next year.

Must-Reads from the Wellness World (Week of February 9, 2016)


“Rethinking the Calorie” – The Atlantic, January 26, 2016
This article claims that the simple weight-loss formula—burn more energy than you consume—may actually be holding us back in the fight to curb obesity. Progress to understand this is critical: in the U.S. alone, the inability to curb the extraordinary prevalence of obesity costs more than $147 billion in healthcare, as well as $4.3 billion in job absenteeism and yet more in lost productivity.

Financial Wellness Will Become Hot Topic in Future

With a painfully slow global economic recovery, and with money being people’s top source of stress (in countries with less generous social benefits), Malleret predicts that “financial wellness” will become an increasingly important concept in the future. Read about why and how financial wellness programs will become as important as physical wellness initiatives for both companies and individuals going forward. Consider the implications for spa and wellness establishments.