Monthly Health Topics

Inspire healthy living year-round with these featured topic emails, posters and more. Build your schedule based on the suggested monthly topics or develop a custom calendar for your business.

Select a month to view the health and wellness topic

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April
people massaging a headache

Stress Management

Unmanaged stress can lead to employee burnout. This decreases productivity while increasing health care costs and turnover.10 Primary sources of work stress include excessive workloads, poor management, and unclear expectations and communication.11

Creating a culture of well-being at work can keep your employees at the top of their game. Companies with cultures of well-being experience a more stable and engaged workforce and are more innovative, agile, and customer-oriented.12

Learn strategies to support mental health, encourage work/life balance, and build emotional intelligence among leaders and managers with this on-demand webinar and mental fitness guide

More ideas for any month

Two people riding bicycles in a park

Cancer Prevention

Use this cancer conversations guide as an actionable resource to champion prevention in the workplace and normalize difficult conversations surrounding cancer. Empower your employees to learn about cancer risks, prevention, screening, and care with these helpful resources and tools.

Two people walking down a city sidewalk

Diabetes Management

Diabetes management can be made easier when your employees have the right resources at their disposal. Learn how KP's proactive approach to diabetes care helps minimize employee health risks. Help your employees understand how they can prevent and manage diabetes.

Person looking out a window

Depression Screening

Depression screening can help anyone – including your employees. Learn about the benefits of creating a stigma-free workplace and how it's key to tackling the mental health crisis. Share these resources to help your employees fight back against depression.

Person sleeping holding pillow

Sleep Management

Poor sleep is common among working-age adults and is linked to many negative workplace outcomes. Research shows inadequate sleep and poor sleep quality contribute to increased employee stress, depression, and fatigue, further impacting employee health and job performance.20

The effects of chronic insufficient sleep extend beyond individual well-being, significantly affecting businesses and the economy. According to the CDC, only 61% of adults consistently get the recommended 7 or more hours of sleep per night.21 Workplace consequences, such as reduced productivity and increased errors, cost employers $1,200 to $3,100 per employee every year.22

You can help mitigate these risks by exploring our Rest and Revive Toolkit for resources that support healthy sleep habits.

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