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COMPARATIVE MODELS FOR WORKPLACE-CENTERED WELLNESS

1. Brady W, Bass J, Moser R, Anstadt G, Loeppke R, Leopold R. Total corporate health care costs. J Occup Environ Med. 1997;39:224-231.

2. Nichols LM, Ginzburg PB, Berenson RA, Christianson J, Hurley RE. Are market forces strong enough to deliver efficient health care systems? Confidence is waning. Health Affairs. 2004;23:8-21.

3. Richling D. Keynote address. American Occupational Health Conference. Midwest Business Group on Health; Kansas City, 2004.

4. Ozminkowski RJ, Goetzel RZ, Santoro J, Saenz B, Eley C, Gorsley B. Estimating risk reduction required to break even in a health promotion program. Am J Health Promo. 2004;18:316-325.
5. Rose G. The Strategy of Preventive Medicine. London: Oxford; 1992.

6. Pelletier KR. A review and analysis of the clinical- and cost-effectiveness studies of comprehensive health promotion and disease  management programs at the worksite: 1998 – 2000 update. Am J Health Promo. 2001;16:107-116.

7. Stein AD, Shakour SK, Zuidema RA. Financial incentives, participation in  employer-sponsored health promotion and changes in employee health and  productivity: HealthPlus health quotient program. J Occup Environ Med. 2000;42:1148-1155.

8. Oher JM. The Employee Assistance Handbook. New York: Wiley; 1999.
9. Guico-Pabio CJ, Cioffi L, Shoner LG. The lucent-takes-heart cardiovascular health management  program: Successful workplace screening. AAOHN J. 2002;50:365-372.

10. Pescatello LS, Murphy D, Vollono J, Lynch E, Bernene J, Costanzo D. The cardiovascular health impact of an incentive worksite health promotion program. Am J Health Promo. 2001;16:16-20.

11. American College of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, and The Benfield Group. Strategic Management Needs in Health and Productivity. Arlington Heights, IL: ACOEM; 2003.

12. Fries JF, Koop CE, Beadle CE, et al. Reducing health care costs by reducing the need and demand for medical services. N Eng J Med. 1993;329:321-325.

13. The Self-Care Institute. Demand Management Handbook. Washington, D.C.: Partnership for Prevention; 1996.

14. American College of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, and the Office of Health Policy and Clinical Outcomes, Thomas Jefferson University. Health-Related Work Loss and Productivity. Arlington Heights, IL: ACOEM; 2002.

15. Russell LB. The role of prevention in health reform. N Eng J Med. 1993;329:352-354.

16. Sciacca J, Seehafer R, Reed R, Mulvaney D. The impact of participation in health promotion on medical costs: A reconsideration of the blue cross blue shield of indiana study. Am J Health Promo. 1993;7:374-383.

17. Haynes G, Dunnagan T. Comparing changes in health risk factors and medical costs over time. Am J Health Promo. 2002;17:112-121.

18. American College of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, ACOEM Health-Related Productivity Roundtable. The Health of the Workforce and its Impact on Business. Arlington Heights, IL: ACOEM; 2003.

19. Guidotti TL. A model of economic development. Occupational Health and Development (Swedish Institute of International Development). 2002;14:43-54.

20. Keating DP, Hertzman C, eds. Developmental Health and the Wealth of Nations: Social,  Biological and Educational Dynamics. London: Guildford; 1999.

21. North FM, Syme L, Feeney A, Shipley M, Marmot M. Psychosocial work environment and sickness absence among  british civil servants:  The whitehall II  study. Am J Pub Health. 1996;86:332-340.

22. Evans RG, Barer ML, Marmor TR. Why are some People Healthy and Others Not?  Determinants of Health in Populations. New York: Aldine de Gruyter; 1994.

23. Friedman DJ, Starfield B. Models of population health: Their value for US public  health practice, policy, and research. Am J Pub Health. 2003;93:366-369.

24. Pollmar TC, Brandt ENJ, Baird MA. Health and behavior: The interplay of biological, behavioral, and social influences: Summary of an institute of medicine report. Am J Health Promo. 2002;16:206-219.

25. Labonté R. Population health and health promotion: What do they have to say to each other? Can J Pub Health. 1995;86:165-168.

26. Guidotti TL. “Why are some people healthy and others not?”  A critique of the population health model. Annals RCPSC. 1997;30:203-206.

27. Abstracts of a New York Academy of Sciences Conference. Socioeconomic status and health in industrial nations:  Social, psychological and biological pathways. Bethesda, MD:1999.

28. Sen A. Development as Freedom. New York: Anchor Books; 1999.

29. Ockene JK, Edgerton EA, Teutsch SM, et al. Integrating evidence-based clinical and community strategies to improve health. Am J Prev Med. 2007;32:244-252.

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