In its 2018 Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
report, Humana
Inc. — one of the nation’s leading
health and wellbeing companies — details its continuing commitment to helping
the individuals and communities it serves live their best lives by expanding and
improving access to affordable healthcare.
“At Humana, we see firsthand the impact that access to quality, affordable care
has on our members and employees,” said Humana President and CEO Bruce D.
Broussard. “Throughout our 2018 CSR Report, we’ve highlighted many of the ways
we’re working to improve the ‘health of care’ — from our focus on integrated
care delivery, to our work in value-based care, to our companywide efforts to
address social determinants of health that impact the health and lives of the
people we serve.”
In 2018, Humana heightened its focus on initiatives targeting social
determinants of health — conditions in the places where people live, learn, work
and play, such as social isolation, food
insecurity
and lack of transportation access — that can often result in roadblocks to
good health. Humana’s wide-ranging capabilities uniquely position the company to
address health outside of the doctor’s office — and deliver integrated care that
can improve people’s health and quality of life.
Humana’s 2018 CSR Report highlights the company’s commitment to providing
whole-person healthcare, investments in supporting healthy communities, and
dedication to achieving sustainable growth through responsible business
practices and environmental stewardship. The report features several examples of
how Humana is inspiring health and wellbeing:
For people
-
Humana Employees: In 2018, Humana achieved its employee Bold
Goal,
increasing employees’ Healthy Days by 20 percent, as measured by the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Healthy Days tool.
Since 2012, Humana employees have gained 2.3 million more Healthy Days, or
roughly an extra week of better days per year for each employee. The company
set a new goal to achieve 500,000 more Healthy Days for employees by the end
of 2022, using 2018 as a baseline.
-
Integrated Care: Humana teamed up with Walgreens to provide easier
access to primary care and other services for seniors in the Kansas City,
Missouri area. Two newly established Partners in Primary Care clinics at
Walgreens stores in the region combine primary care, pharmacy, in-person
health plan support and other services for Medicare beneficiaries.
Additionally, through completing its minority ownership acquisitions of
Kindred at Home and Curo Health, Humana began testing and learning
new care and payment models in five communities — to improve health outcomes
of members with multiple chronic conditions.
-
Opioid Addiction: As part of the national effort to combat opioid
overuse, Humana set a goal to reduce the number of members receiving opioid
prescriptions greater than 100 morphine milligram equivalent (MME), a dosage
that raises the risks of opioid overdose, by 40 percent. In 2018, Humana
closed in on its goal, reducing the number of members receiving
prescriptions greater than 100 MME by 36 percent.
For communities
-
Bold Goal: From 2015 to 2018, Humana Medicare Advantage members in
Humana’s original seven Bold Goal communities, places where Humana is
working to achieve its goal of helping people improve their health 20
percent by 2020, experienced a 2.7 percent improvement in their Healthy
Days. Meanwhile, Humana seniors in San Antonio improved their Healthy Days
by 9.8 percent, marking the halfway point toward their Bold Goal. The
company screened more than 500,000 people for social determinants of health
needs in these Bold Goal communities and developed toolkits to help
physicians screen for and address social isolation, loneliness, and food
insecurity in patients.
-
The Humana Foundation: In 2018, the Humana Foundation invested $7.4
million in nine organizations located in Bold Goal communities as part of
its new community investment strategy focused on creating sustainable
results addressing social determinants of health. The Foundation aims to
co-create communities where leadership, culture and systems work to improve
and sustain long-term positive health outcomes. For example, collaborated
with San Antonio-based nonprofits in the strategic investment program’s
first year, to address social
isolation and
food
insecurity in
area seniors.
For the future
-
Environmental Goals: In 2018, Humana set new environmental targets for
greenhouse gas emissions and waste, using a 2017 baseline, with a goal to
reach or exceed the targets by the end of 2022.
-
Humana set a new goal of 2.1 percent year-over-year greenhouse gas
emissions reduction, and exceeded the 2.1 percent reduction in 2018. The
goal covers Humana’s portfolio of owned and leased properties under
direct company control. Sustainability-investment projects and
building-optimization changes have made most of the impact.
-
The goal was set at 60 percent waste diversion. By recycling and reusing
more, and sending less waste to landfills, Humana is currently ahead of
its waste-diversion goal — achieving a rate of 60.3 percent at the sites
where the company and its vendors manage waste and recycling services.
-
Inclusion & Diversity: In 2018, Humana formed GenUs, a
multigenerational network resource group that helps employees create and
celebrate intergenerational connections. The company also established nine
new Inclusion & Diversity (I&D) Councils to foster employee inclusion and
belonging within the changing landscape of the workforce.
CSR Report materiality assessment & reporting standard
In the fall of 2018, Humana completed a third-party materiality assessment —
including interviews and surveys with more than 1,000 stakeholders from across
the country in an effort to learn what corporate responsibility topics are of
the greatest significance to them. The assessment engaged employees, members,
healthcare providers, suppliers and community partners. Details of this
materiality assessment are included in the CSR Report.
Humana collected and reported its 2018 CSR Report in accordance with the
Global Reporting Initiative (GRI), the world’s most recognized standards
for environmental, social and governance reporting. GRI is an independent
international organization that helps businesses, governments and other
organizations understand and communicate the impact of business on critical
sustainability issues.
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Sustainable Brands Staff
Published May 17, 2019 8am EDT / 5am PDT / 1pm BST / 2pm CEST