- Three quarters of volunteers say volunteering has made them feel
physically healthier and lowered their stress levels
- New study finds that volunteering benefits individuals,
communities and employers

Company Website:
http://www.unitedhealthgroup.com
MINNEAPOLIS -- (Business Wire)
A new study released today by UnitedHealth Group (NYSE:UNH) and the
Optum Institute finds that volunteering is linked to better physical,
mental and emotional health.
Doing Good is Good for You: 2013 Health and Volunteering Study
reveals that 76 percent of U.S. adults who volunteer report that
volunteering has made them feel physically healthier, and 78 percent
report that volunteering lowers their levels of stress, leading to
feeling better than adults who do not volunteer. The study also
illustrates that employers benefit from employees who volunteer in terms
of better employee health and in professional-skills development that
employees use in the workplace.
The study reveals four key benefits of volunteering that make a positive
impact on people’s health:
-
Health: volunteers say that they feel better – physically, mentally
and emotionally;
-
Stress: volunteering helps people manage and lower their stress levels;
-
Purpose: volunteers feel a deeper connection to communities and to
others;
-
Engagement: volunteers are more informed health care consumers, and
more engaged and involved in managing their health.
The study also shows that volunteering is good for employers:
-
the health benefits volunteers enjoy also benefit the workplace –
employers can expect lower health care costs and higher productivity
from employees who volunteer;
-
volunteers in the study report lower stress levels; other, established
research shows that reducing employee stress contributes to higher
productivity and levels of engagement;
-
volunteering can develop employees’ work skills, which benefits
employer and employee;
-
volunteers report that volunteering helps them build teamwork and
time-management skills; fosters stronger relationships with
colleagues; and supports professional networking;
-
volunteer activities lead to stronger positive feelings toward an
employer when volunteer programs are supported in the workplace.
To read the full Doing Good is Good for You: 2013 Health and
Volunteering Study, visit http://www.unitedhealthgroup.com/SR.
“These findings show that the benefits of volunteering help strengthen
communities and have real, measurable health benefits for the people who
volunteer,” said Kate Rubin, UnitedHealth Group vice president of Social
Responsibility. “Employers enjoy the benefits of physically and mentally
healthier employees; those that support volunteering programs in the
workplace see added benefits that drive directly to their bottom line.”
Rubin will present the study results at the 2013 National Conference on
Volunteering and Service, convened by the volunteer service organization
Points of Light, June 19-22, in Washington, D.C.
The Health and Volunteering Study explored the relationship between
volunteerism and health, and looked at the role employers play in
encouraging volunteerism. The study, which surveyed more than 3,300 U.S.
adults, is part of UnitedHealth Group’s continued effort to support
volunteerism, understand its impact on health, and strengthen employees’
connections to the communities where they live and work. It expands on
the findings established in a 2010 survey by UnitedHealthcare and
VolunteerMatch around the same topic.
“The business community, the health sector, individuals and families all
have a stake in building a healthier future for our nation, and that
begins with improving our communities’ health in ways that are
sustainable and affordable,” said Dr. Carol Simon, director of the Optum
Institute, which provides analytical insights on the nation’s rapidly
changing health care landscape. “Volunteering builds health outside
traditional clinical settings by engaging people in activities that
strengthen communities and personal health at the same time – a win-win
for everyone.”
Doing Good is Good for You: 2013 Health and Volunteering Study used
an index-validated scale to understand the experienced physical and
mental health benefits of volunteering. The study was conducted by
Harris Interactive from Feb. 9 through March 18, 2013. This report was
based on a quantitative mixed-mode survey (i.e. online and
telephone) of 3,351 adults 18 or older and included indexed-validated
measures for physical and mental health. Respondents were
general-population members of an online consumer research panel or
recruited through random-digit-dial methods and interviewed by mobile or
landline telephones. The results were weighted to be representative of
the total U.S. adult population.
About UnitedHealth Group
UnitedHealth Group (NYSE: UNH) is a diversified health and well-being
company dedicated to helping people live healthier lives and making
health care work better. With headquarters in Minnetonka, Minn.,
UnitedHealth Group offers a broad spectrum of products and services
through two business platforms: UnitedHealthcare, which provides health
care coverage and benefits services; and Optum, which provides
information and technology-enabled health services. Through its
businesses, UnitedHealth Group serves more than 80 million people
worldwide. For more information, visit UnitedHealth Group at www.unitedhealthgroup.com.
About the Optum Institute
Optum has established the Optum Institute to serve as an authoritative
source of analytical insights on the rapidly changing U.S. health care
landscape, while acting as a constructive enabler of sustainable health.
The Optum Institute works in partnership with consumers, health
professionals, hospitals, employers, governments, health plans, and the
life sciences industry, to help transform health care delivery. More
information is available at institute.optum.com.
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Contacts:
UnitedHealth Group
Lauren Mihajlov, 952-936-3068
lauren_mihajlov@uhg.com
Source: UnitedHealth Group
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