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Companies might be spending on the wrong things when it comes to employee health. 鈥淲e found that businesses were losing P100 billion annually due to poor employee health. That鈥檚 in spite of companies already spending roughly P150 billion taking care of their employees,鈥 said Santiago J. Arnaiz, co-founder and chief operating officer of听, a health data consultancy.

In this B-Side episode, Mr. Arnaiz (formerly of听大象传媒) and Project Fort co-founder and Chief Executive Officer Erika M. Modina tell听大象传媒听reporter Patricia B. Mirasol how the private sector can contribute to public health with the help of data.听If [companies] are given the right tools to collect data, then they can make evidence-based health strategies that save money and engage employees,听said Ms. Modina.听This is the perfect time to rebuild the health system because people understand its importance.

TAKEAWAYS

A data-driven culture situates a company for success.

Having the infrastructure to analyze health data 鈥 and how it affects the听bottomline听鈥 serves a firm well as it digitally transforms its other areas of business.

鈥淭here is a clear incentive to invest in data infrastructure for employee health,鈥 said Mr. Arnaiz. A data-driven community, he said, is one where the data infrastructure penetrates all levels of the corporation and everyone is unified in the mission of health.

鈥淭his infrastructure becomes your jumping point for creating a data-driven culture,鈥 he added, 鈥渁nd that鈥檚 priceless when it comes to situating yourself for success as a company.鈥澨

Companies听spend money on the wrong things.听

From听the policies they enact听to the resources they听provide,听companies control many factors in the day-to-day lives of their staff.听

鈥淭he social networks that people belong to affect their health,鈥 said Ms. Modina. 鈥淥ne of those social networks is a person鈥檚 working conditions.鈥澨

The workplace听presents a prime opportunity to create听a healthier Philippines, and yet employers do not spend their money right when it comes to employee health.听

鈥淚n our research in Project Fort, we found that businesses were losing P100 billion annually due to poor employee health,鈥 said Mr. Arnaiz. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 in spite of companies already spending roughly P150 billion taking care of their employees.鈥澨

Proper insights into employee care, Mr. Arnaiz听added,听are available through听health-tech听solutions. MSMEs (micro, small, and medium enterprises) with limited resources can likewise build a robust data infrastructure by prioritizing their needs first, and then finding a firm that understands their desired outcome.听

There are roadblocksin听translating听data insights into meaningful policies.

鈥淥ne problem is that people aren鈥檛 collecting data,鈥 said Ms. Modina, who is also president of听, a research institution advancing health equity through the conception, translation, and communication of health systems and policy research. 鈥淎nother problem is that they may be collecting data, but don鈥檛 know how to make sense of it.鈥澨

Making sense of, and collecting insights from, data means that听data collection听should have an aim from the very start. For companies, this means knowing their employees, having a baseline on their health, and realizing there are so many factors that come into play beyond a person鈥檚 individual choice.听

鈥淚f companies have health champions, and if they鈥檙e given the right tools to collect data, then they could make evidence-based health strategies that save money and engage employees,鈥 she said.

The听pandemic听is听an opportunity to rebuild the health system.

鈥淲e have to do an analysis of what we already have and where we鈥檙e situated,鈥 said Ms. Modina, adding that this covers human resources, medical supplies, technologies, information systems, service delivery networks, finance, and governance.

鈥淲e can鈥檛 solve what we don鈥檛 know.鈥 The data that is now being collected on COVID-19 hospitalizations and deaths, she said, can be expanded in the future to determine free bed space in a hospital, or thatquantity听of听available medicines in a pharmacy.听

Determining all the factors that make up these building blocks gives a clearer picture on how partnerships between the public and private sectors can happen.

鈥淭his is the perfect time to rebuild the health system because people understand its importance,听said Ms. Modina.

Recorded remotely on May 5. Produced by Paolo L. Lopez, and Sam L. Marcelo.

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