It’s Men’s Health Month, National Safety Month, and for many organizations, time for a mid-year benefits review. June has a way of bringing workforce wellbeing into focus, whether it’s part of your strategic plan or not.
That’s actually an opportunity. The conversation around employee wellness in 2026 is more sophisticated, data-driven, and closely tied to business performance than ever before. Employers achieving the strongest results aren’t simply offering wellness programs. They’re designing initiatives around proven strategies and evidence-based practices that improve employee health, engagement, productivity, and retention.
What the Data Is Telling Us
The National Safety Council, which marks its 30th anniversary of National Safety Month this June, frames workforce wellbeing as inseparable from safety culture. That framing matters. According to the CDC’s NIOSH Total Worker Health framework, organizations that integrate physical safety, mental health support, and preventive care into a unified approach consistently outperform those running siloed programs.
The Business Group on Health’s 2026 Employer Health Care Strategy Survey found that higher utilization of mental and behavioral health services is now one of the top drivers of health plan cost increases. Employers who are staying ahead of that curve are doing so by expanding access, not by limiting it.
Behavioral Health Integration: The Biggest Shift
The wellness programs delivering results in 2026 treat behavioral health as a core benefit, not an add-on. That means telehealth mental health access with realistic appointment availability, manager training to recognize and respond to burnout, and EAP vendors whose utilization rates are actually tracked and reviewed. Wellness and population health management programs designed with this in mind look very different from a gym discount and a biometric screening.
Employers who’ve moved in this direction are seeing downstream benefits in reduced absenteeism, better engagement scores, and lower long-term health costs. Behavioral health conditions left unaddressed are expensive. Early access and reduced stigma around seeking help are among the highest-ROI investments a benefits strategy can make.

Preventive Care Incentives That Actually Change Behavior
The most effective employer wellness programs in 2026 use incentive design thoughtfully. Participation-based incentives, tied to completing a health risk assessment, scheduling an annual physical, or engaging with a chronic condition management program, are outperforming outcome-based models in terms of employee acceptance and sustainable engagement.
For employers with self-funded or level-funded plans, the ROI case is direct. Every avoided ER visit, every early-caught chronic condition, every employee managing their diabetes effectively is a real dollar figure in the claims data. Data analytics and benchmarking tools now make it possible to connect wellness program participation to actual plan utilization trends giving HR leaders concrete evidence for program investment decisions.
Making It Work for a Mid-Size Workforce
You don’t need a Fortune 500 budget to build a wellness program that delivers results. Some of the most effective mid-size employer programs are built on three things: a behavioral health-forward EAP, a preventive care incentive tied to the health plan design, and a communication strategy that normalizes using the benefits available. Employee benefits strategy and consulting support helps employers design programs proportionate to their workforce size and budget without overbuilding or underdelivering.
This June, the conversation about wellness is worth having with intention. The employers investing in the right programs today are building healthier, more engaged workforces and managing costs better because of it.
Ready to build a wellness strategy that delivers real results? The team at Tooher-Ferraris has been helping businesses strengthen their benefits programs since 1932. Contact us today to schedule a no-obligation consultation.
External Sources: CDC NIOSH Total Worker Health | National Safety Council — National Safety Month






