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Today, there is an increasingly urgent need for
individuals to a take a greater level of responsibility for their
health and well-being. Spiraling healthcare costs have made it
nearly impossible for an average family to pay for basic healthcare.
Companies are struggling to pay their employees’ health benefits,
and the federal government has no answers. We are on our own.
And we can’t look to help from our doctor. Over
2000 years ago Hippocrates, the father of western medicine, stated
that the primary role of the physician is educator, but health
professionals in the fast-paced 21st century have no time to devote
to educating their patients on how to live a healthy lifestyle.
At the same time, today there is a parallel trend
of people looking for more personalized approaches to wellness.
People want to go beyond the cold, by-the-numbers approaches of
conventional medicine and be viewed as a “whole person” — addressing
the physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual dimensions of our
lives.
These two trends are nothing new as they
represent two of the key principles—“Self-Responsibility” and
“Treating the Whole Person”—that were hallmarks of the wellness and
holistic health movements of the 1970s. A quarter-century later,
these principles, once dismissed by conventional healthcare as being
too progressive, are now being viewed as essential core elements to
solving the current healthcare crisis.
Teaching People to Be Well
Over thirty years ago a young resident at Johns
Hopkins had a flash of inspiration that would come to have a major
impact on these two challenges facing us today. This young doctor,
John W. Travis, MD, MPH, had been working in the U.S. Public Health
Service where he was a protégé of Dr. Lewis Robbins, the creator of
the Health Risk Appraisal (HRA). He had also been influenced by Dr.
Abraham Maslow’s concept of self-actualization. Late one night in
his office he envisioned the idea for the Illness-Wellness Continuum
(see below), that placed “wellness” in a revolutionary new context
which bridged health and human potential.
Dr. Travis decided to dedicate his life to
“teaching people to be well,” rather than treating patients, and so
he subsequently left for California where he helped to pioneer the
modern wellness movement—opening the first wellness center in
America in 1975, writing the classic Wellness Workbook, and creating
the first wellness assessment, the Wellness Inventory, to serve the
needs of his new wellness-oriented clients.
However, most pioneers are ahead of their time,
and by the 1980s the wellness concept was catching on in corporate
America and moving farther and farther away from a whole person
focus. Then, wellness was associated with weight loss, stress
reduction, and smoking cessation programs as well as medical
screenings and health risk appraisals. This continued for 25 years
until the current health care crisis forced consumers, corporate
executives, the health care industry, and the Federal government to
look for new and innovative solutions. Dr. Travis’ original
Illness-Wellness Continuum, developed originally in 1972, has been
widely reprinted in health and medical textbooks worldwide for over
30 years.

The continuum shows the relationship of the
Wellness and Treatment Paradigms. Moving from the center to the left
shows a deteriorating state of health. Moving to the right of center
indicates increasing levels of health and well-being. The Treatment
Paradigm can only take you to the neutral point, where the symptoms
of disease have been alleviated. That is all it is designed to do.
The Wellness Paradigm, on the other hand, which can be utilized at
any point on the continuum, helps you move toward higher levels of
wellness. |
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The Wellness Inventory—A Whole-Person
Wellness Program
Today, we have come full circle. E-health pioneer
HealthWorld Online (www.healthy.net)
and Dr. Travis have collaborated to create a greatly enhanced online
version of the Wellness Inventory to meet our society’s current
wellness needs. The Wellness Inventory is an interactive,
whole-person wellness program designed to help individuals gain
personal insight into their state of physical, emotional, and
spiritual wellness and to take more responsibility for their
personal health and wellness. The program revolves around assessment
in the 12 dimensions of wellness in Dr. Travis’ Wellness Energy
System (see diagram B). The assessment is educational in nature and
helps to create awareness of how one’s lifestyle, attitudes and
behavior influence one’s state of health and well-being.
The program focuses on the areas of your life you
are most motivated to change (as revealed in the assessment)
offering guidance, tools and resources to transform this new
awareness into lasting changes in one’s life, including a renewed
sense of health and well-being. The Wellness Inventory may be
utilized directly by individuals at www.WellPeople.com and may also
be delivered in organizational settings.
12 Dimensions of Wellness—The Wellness
Energy System
The Wellness Energy System, conceived by John W.
Travis, MD, MPH, represents a whole-person approach to wellness. The
system has twelve components.three are the major sources of energy
input: eating, breathing, and sensing; and nine are forms of energy
output: self-responsibility and love, moving, feeling,
communicating, thinking, intimacy and sex, working and playing,
finding meaning, and transcending.

A Flexible Wellness Solution
The Wellness Inventory offers maximum flexibility
for implementation in a wide range of settings, including corporate
wellness programs, hospitals, spas, health practitioners, life
coaches, government agencies, and churches. Reporting, coaching and
communication tools for licensing organizations facilitate
individual and group needs assessment, one-on-one coaching,
increased levels of participation in a wellness program, and ongoing
wellness education. For health professionals, the Wellness Inventory
is an effective tool for “teaching their patients to be well” and
for laying the foundation for a broader wellness program that
integrates their own key areas of specialization. For life coaches,
it is an invaluable tool to help determine a clientfs readiness or
change and to aid in the coaching process to keep them motivated to
reach their goals. For spas, the Wellness Inventory may be central
to a year-round guest engagement program.
For companies or organizations, the Wellness
Inventory may be utilized as the centerpiece of a custom wellness
solution. Optional wellness program components that may be built
around the Wellness Inventory include wellness coaching, monthly
workshops, wellness e-newsletters, and specific modules such as
resiliency training, nutrition, or a walking program.
For a personal or organizational wellness
initiative to have its greatest chance of success in the 21st
century, it is important to have a strong focus on
self-responsibility, personal and collective readiness to change,
and a personalized, whole-person perspective.
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Go on a Year-Long
Personal Wellness Journey
The
Wellness Inventory takes you on a year-long wellness
journey. The program is described in the following 5
steps:
Step
1—Assessment: Complete a lifestyle assessment covering 12 dimensions of
whole-person wellness. The assessment is educational
in nature and helps to create awareness of how one’s
lifestyle, attitudes and behavior influence health and
well-being.
Step
2—Wellness Scores: You will receive Wellness and Satisfaction Scores for
each of the 12 dimensions of wellness. You will also
learn your areas of strength as well as the areas you
are most motivated to change.
Step
3—Personal Wellness Plan: Create a personal wellness action plan comprised of
3-5 wellness action steps in the key areas you are
most motivated to change. As you progress on your
wellness journey, you may edit and update your
wellness plan.
Step
4—Tools to Help You Reach Your Wellness Goals:
Utilize a suite of tools to help you follow your
wellness plan and meet your goals.
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Weekly Email Reminders with Personal Wellness Plan
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My
Wellness Journal to record your observations and
progress
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Wellness Self-Study Center
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Test Comparison Feature
Step 5—Resources for Ongoing Wellness:
Access resources and services, including recommended
reading and educational audio programs to help you
learn to maintain a higher state of well-being and
vitality.
Wellness Coaching:
Coaching can greatly accelerate this 5-step process by
providing the support and accountability that increase
your chances for success in meeting your goals.
Coaching is available direct to consumers or in
organizational settings. |
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Custom Corporate
Wellness Program
Here is an outline of a potential corporate wellness
program utilizing the Wellness Inventory:
1.
Individual Employee Assessment: Administer Wellness Inventory to employees at
beginning of wellness program.
2.
Wellness Coaching:
Offer
wellness coaching to help employees who need
assistance and motivation in formulating their
personalized wellness action plan. Optional:
additional coaching for at-risk employees and
management.
3.
Monthly Wellness Workshops: Ongoing employee education and motivation through a
monthly workshop series covering the 12 dimensions of
lifestyle in the Wellness Inventory.
4.
Wellness e-newsletter: Sent through the e-mail broadcast feature.
5. Company-Wide Needs
Assessment: Use the group reporting feature
to determine the company-wide wellness needs and to
design program modules to address the needs.
Alternatively, specific modules may be designed into
the overall wellness program from the outset (walking
program, resiliency training, etc.) based on perceived
needs. |
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Alternatively, specific modules may be designed
into the overall wellness program from the outset (walking program,
resiliency training, etc.) based on perceived needs.
For licensing inquiries, contact
Jim@healthy.net or 310-823-9553
James Strohecker, a pioneer in e-health, is
president and cofounder of HealthWorld Online (www.healthy.net),
the first healthy living/alternative medicine-focused Internet
Network. He was executive editor of Alternative Medicine: The
Definitive Guide (1st Ed), and is co-author of 4 books
including Natural Healing for Depression.
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