The Province

Corporate health plans enter new age

Firms tailor packages to meet millennial­s’ needs

- Alexandra Posadzki THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO — During his three-year tenure as a financial analyst at one of Canada’s biggest banks, Devon Wright never once used his company health plan.

“There was just nothing there that was of any interest to me,” says Wright, 28.

So when Wright quit his job in 2012 to launch technology company Turnstyle Solutions, he decided to create a benefits package tailored to his needs.

Turnstyle is one example of how Canadian companies are tweaking their health plans in order to appeal to a new generation of employees in the coming years. Price water house Coopers( P wC) predicts that millennial s—who it defined as people born between 1980 and 2000 — will comprise 50 per cent of the global workforce by 2020.

In addition to the standard drug and dental benefits, Turnstyle covers naturopath­ic medicine, mental health counsellin­g and provides employees with a fitness subsidy that they can spend on anything from a gym membership to yoga classes to participat­ion in a Frisbee league.

The Toronto-based startup also offers free, healthy meals several times a week — a major perk for 23-year-old Sam Hillman.

“Some mornings we have soup, or avocados and eggs,” says Hillman, an account director with the company’s sales team.

“This emphasis on living a healthy lifestyle really shows the company’s commitment to me as a holistic individual, and not just a Turnstyle employee.”

Life insurance companies such as Sun Life Financial and Manulife Financial say a growing number of employers have been looking to implement corporate wellness programs in recent years, partly in response to the desires of millennial workers.

Preventive health care has become increasing­ly popular as employers have come to realize how it can benefit not only the individual but the company.

Healthy workers are more productive, miss fewer days of work due to illness and are less likely to request costly drugs later down the road.

“We’re trying to respond to what millennial­s are looking for, but there are also benefits to the organizati­on for doing these things,” says Joy Sloane, a partner in the Toronto health and benefits consulting practice at human resources firm Morneau Shepell.

Flexible plans, such as health spending accounts, are also on the rise as employers look to recruit and retain young workers.

“The millennial generation is looking for different things than their parents had in terms of benefits plans,” says Lori Casselman, assistant vice-president of integrated health solutions at Sun Life Financial.

Millennial­s place a greater priority on mental health services, according to insurers.

“Mental health is now recognized as being one of the key factors in absenteeis­m and lost productivi­ty, as well as drug claims and longterm disability,” says Lisa Callaghan, assistant vice-president of products for Manulife’s group benefits division.

While much of the change to corporate health plans is being fuelled by millennial­s entering the workforce, Sloane says it isn’t just young workers who reap the rewards of such changes.

“Although it’s being targeted at the millennial­s, I think it’s really beneficial for the whole working population,” she says.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada