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Employee Assistance Programs | 8 |
Personnel Policy | 8 |
Program Development | 8 |
Employer Employee Relationship | 6 |
Adult Education | 5 |
Corporate Education | 5 |
Cost Effectiveness | 5 |
Health Programs | 5 |
Physical Fitness | 5 |
Well Being | 5 |
Wellness | 5 |
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CUPA Journal | 1 |
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Behrens, Ruth A. | 1 |
Glanz, Karen | 1 |
Knadler, Gary F. | 1 |
Levin, Robert C. | 1 |
Sleet, David A. | 1 |
Stull, James B. | 1 |
Wilson, Quelda | 1 |
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Information Analyses | 4 |
Reports - Descriptive | 3 |
Journal Articles | 1 |
Legal/Legislative/Regulatory… | 1 |
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Wilson, Quelda – CUPA Journal, 1988
The strategy involved in the planning process to develop an employee assistance program is described. Issues to be decided include whether the program should cover both academic and nonacademic personnel; whether the idea could be made attractive to management and staff; and identification of a potential source of funding. (MLW)
Descriptors: Change, Employee Assistance Programs, Higher Education, Personnel Directors
Health Resources and Services Administration, Rockville, MD. Bureau of Health Care Delivery and Assistance. – 1986
This document was designed for use by persons or agencies interested in both establishing and evaluating employee assistance programs (EAP) for federal employees. It contains essential elements, standards, and assessment criteria which have been developed to assist in the planning and implementation of services, and to provide a framework for…
Descriptors: Employee Assistance Programs, Evaluation Criteria, Human Services, Needs Assessment
Behrens, Ruth A. – 1985
Increasing numbers of small businesses are providing wellness activities for their employees. By instituting wellness programs, small businesses can improve employee morale, engender a commitment from employees, enhance the feeling of "family" among employees, improve worker productivity, and contain health care costs. Wellness programs are…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Corporate Education, Cost Effectiveness, Employee Assistance Programs
Sleet, David A. – 1986
Cited as the largest single cause of lost work time and on-the-job fatalities for U.S. workers, motor vehicle crashes cause major nonrecoverable losses for U.S. businesses. Workplace programs to encourage employees to wear safety belts can thus help employers reduce traffic accident-related losses of work time and can substantially reduce the…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Corporate Education, Cost Effectiveness, Employee Assistance Programs
Glanz, Karen – 1986
As is the case with other worksite wellness programs, company-sponsored nutrition programs have been expanding both in numbers and in depth. Besides offering a convenient health-enhancing benefit to employees, worksite nutrition programs benefit business by preventing several costly nutrition-related health problems, enhancing employees' overall…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Body Weight, Corporate Education, Cost Effectiveness
Levin, Robert C. – 1987
Company-sponsored wellness programs are particularly important for older employees inasmuch as they are at greater risk of disease and disability than are their younger counterparts and their health care and health insurance costs are generally higher. As the cost of retirement benefits rises, wellness programs for retirees are becoming…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Corporate Education, Cost Effectiveness, Employee Assistance Programs
Stull, James B.; And Others – 1986
Since research suggests that a direct relationship exists between effective orientation and employee productivity, careful consideration must be given to content, design, and delivery issues when developing orientation training programs for foreign-born employees. The United States typically does not provide adequate employee orientation.…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Employee Assistance Programs, Employer Employee Relationship, Foreign Workers
Knadler, Gary F.; And Others – 1987
Because sedentary living creates health consequences that ultimately affect employees' productivity, many companies are sponsoring worksite physical fitness programs for their employees. The cost-effectiveness of such programs and the resulting reduction in employees' absenteeism rates and medical and health care costs have been well documented.…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Corporate Education, Cost Effectiveness, Employee Assistance Programs