Why 2026 Is a Turning Point for Chronic Disease Costs
Every major benefits advisory firm is telling employers the same thing this year. According to Aon, U.S. per-employee healthcare costs are projected to exceed $17,000 in 2026, a 9.5% increase. The Business Group on Health's 2026 survey of employers covering 11.6 million lives puts the median increase at 9%. Willis Towers Watson and Mercer report similar figures.
On a compounded basis, the Business Group on Health calculates that 2026 costs will be 62% higher than 2017 levels. This is not a one-year spike. It is the third or fourth consecutive year of increases after a decade that averaged around 3%.
The driver is not pharmacy inflation in isolation. It is chronic disease prevalence. Cancer, musculoskeletal conditions, cardiovascular disease, and diabetes are the top four cost factors named across every major employer benefits survey. Autoimmune disorders, obesity, and GLP-1 utilization add pressure on top of those four.
According to the CDC, chronic and mental health conditions account for the overwhelming majority of the nation's $4.9 trillion in annual healthcare spending. The indirect costs compound the direct ones: the CDC Foundation estimates $225.8 billion per year in absenteeism losses, or $1,685 per employee. The Integrated Benefits Institute calculates 540 million workdays lost annually from employees underperforming due to chronic conditions.
Employers who act before their next benefits renewal cycle have a meaningful window. Those who wait are not saving money. They are deferring a cost that compounds.
The Four Conditions Driving the Most Employer Spend
Employers often want to know which conditions to prioritize. The evidence points to four.
Cancer is the top cost driver for the fourth consecutive year, with approximately 90% of employers in the Business Group on Health's 2026 survey naming it a top concern. Treatment costs and specialty pharmacy spend are the primary mechanisms.
Musculoskeletal conditions — back pain, joint disorders, repetitive strain — are the second highest cost driver and the leading source of disability claims. They are also highly responsive to behavioral and physical activity interventions.
Cardiovascular disease drives significant direct claims costs and is responsible for a disproportionate share of premature mortality and disability. According to the American College of Lifestyle Medicine, lifestyle factors — nutrition, physical activity, stress, sleep — are the primary modifiable determinants of cardiovascular risk.
Diabetes and pre-diabetes are where employer programs have the most actionable evidence. The CDC-recognized Diabetes Prevention Program reduces diabetes incidence by 58% at three years. A 2025 peer-reviewed study in Diabetes Care found the program delivers meaningful reductions in direct medical costs per enrollee over two years.
The GLP-1 variable cuts across all four. According to a 2026 Peterson-KFF analysis, 34% of employers covering GLP-1s for weight loss now require participation in a lifestyle or behavior change program, up from 10% the prior year. CMS has codified this pattern in its BALANCE Model, which pairs GLP-1 access with mandatory lifestyle support. Employers investing in behavior change programs are increasingly positioned to meet that requirement.
What Program Types Actually Work: An Honest Assessment
Most vendor marketing conflates three distinct program types. The evidence does not treat them equally, and employers evaluating vendors deserve a clear picture.
| Program Type | What It Covers | ROI Evidence | Time Horizon |
|---|---|---|---|
| Disease Management | Employees already diagnosed with chronic conditions | $3.80 per dollar invested (RAND/PepsiCo) | Short-term, 1-3 years |
| Lifestyle / Wellness | Activity challenges, smoking cessation, general stress | $0.50 per dollar invested (RAND/PepsiCo) | Long-term, 5+ years |
| Evidence-Based Curricula (e.g. DPP) | High-risk employees, specific condition prevention | Credible clinical and economic outcomes at 2-3 years | Mid-term, 2-3 years |
Disease management programs provide targeted support to employees already diagnosed with chronic conditions: diabetes coaching, cardiac care management, musculoskeletal programs. This category has the strongest short-term ROI evidence. A RAND analysis of PepsiCo's program, drawing on seven years of data from more than 67,000 employees and published in Health Affairs, found disease management returned $3.80 per dollar invested, driven by a 29% reduction in hospital admissions.
Broad lifestyle or wellness programs — activity challenges, smoking cessation, general stress programming — show a different picture in the highest-quality research. The same RAND/PepsiCo analysis found lifestyle management returned $0.50 per dollar. A 2021 systematic review by Baid, Hayles, and Finkelstein at Duke-NUS, published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, reviewed 25 economic evaluations of U.S. worksite wellness programs. Only two met both high methodologic quality and low selection-bias standards. Neither found positive short-term ROI.
The important nuance is what "short-term" means. Lifestyle programs do reduce health risks, improve absenteeism, and create a feeder effect into disease management. The RAND data shows that employees who used both disease management and lifestyle programs had better outcomes than those using either alone. Evidence-based curricula like the Diabetes Prevention Program demonstrate clinical and economic impact at the two-to-three year horizon. The lifestyle medicine literature consistently shows that 70-80% of chronic disease is attributable to modifiable behaviors, meaning lifestyle intervention can slow or reverse early-stage disease over time.
The honest synthesis: targeted disease management pays back fastest; broad lifestyle programs pay back on longer time horizons through risk reduction; evidence-based behavior change curricula like the DPP sit in the middle with credible clinical and economic outcomes. Program design, targeting, and integration matter more than the category label on the vendor's brochure.
Why Digital Coaching Changes the Evidence Picture
The evidence base for digital chronic disease interventions has matured substantially in the last three years, and it changes the employer calculus.
A 2024 meta-analysis of 106,261 hypertension and diabetes patients published in the Journal of Telemedicine and Telecare found that telehealth significantly improves clinical outcomes across both conditions. A 2025 scoping review in JMIR examined 92 studies on remote health coaching for type 2 diabetes and found 73% showed improvement in diabetes parameters. A 2024 systematic review in JAMA Network Open found digital hypertension interventions reduce systolic blood pressure at both six and twelve months, with particular effectiveness in health-disparity populations.

The pattern across this literature is consistent: digital programs that combine human coaching, self-monitoring tools, and evidence-based behavioral curricula produce clinical outcomes comparable to in-person care, at scale, with cost profiles that work for employers who cannot build out in-house clinical programs.
A 2020 peer-reviewed analysis in the Journal of Health Economics and Outcomes Research examined a digital Diabetes Prevention Program in a workforce population and found significant reductions in healthcare utilization. The CDC's Diabetes Prevention Impact Toolkit now explicitly supports employer cost modeling for digital DPP programs.
The Federal Tailwind: What CMS Is Doing in 2026
Between December 2025 and April 2026, CMS launched three models that directly validate employer investment in behavior-change-based chronic care. This is relevant context for HR leaders building business cases internally, and for brokers advising clients.
The ACCESS Model (Advancing Chronic Care with Effective, Scalable Solutions) is a ten-year voluntary payment model targeting hypertension, diabetes, chronic musculoskeletal pain, and depression. CMS notes these conditions affect more than two-thirds of Medicare beneficiaries. According to STAT News, more than 150 organizations were accepted for the first cohort, with the performance period beginning July 5, 2026.
MAHA ELEVATE (Make America Healthy Again: Enhancing Lifestyle and Evaluating Value-based Approaches Through Evidence) explicitly builds a Medicare evidence base for whole-person lifestyle medicine approaches addressing the behavioral root causes of chronic disease.
BALANCE pairs GLP-1 access with mandatory lifestyle support, with coverage launching in Medicaid as early as May 2026.
These models signal federal consensus that behavior change belongs at the center of chronic care, not as an add-on, but as a clinical intervention. Employers investing now are ahead of where the market is heading.
The Point-Solution Problem
The structural obstacle most employers face is not a lack of programs. It is too many disconnected ones.
According to Mercer's 2025 national survey, 51.4% of U.S. adults manage two or more chronic conditions simultaneously. Single-condition point solutions — a diabetes-only app, an MSK-only program — are structurally mismatched to that reality. The Shortlister 2026 Workplace Wellness Trends Report found that RFPs for navigation and concierge services grew 156% as employers try to manage point-solution sprawl.
The most sophisticated employers in the Business Group on Health's 2026 survey are explicitly asking which programs deliver meaningful results for members with chronic conditions, not just which programs exist. That is a different, harder question, and it is the right one.
A behavior change platform that addresses the root-cause behaviors driving multiple chronic conditions — nutrition, physical activity, stress, sleep, tobacco use — is a structurally better fit for a workforce where more than half of employees are managing more than one condition. It is not another point solution. It is the layer that makes the rest of the benefits stack more effective.
How to Evaluate a Chronic Disease Management Program: A Framework for Employers
Given the evidence landscape above, here is a practical evaluation framework.
1. Does it target the right population? Programs that focus on employees already showing risk indicators or early diagnoses produce faster ROI than broad-population programs. Ask vendors how they identify and engage high-risk members.
2. Is the curriculum evidence-based? CDC-recognized programs like the Diabetes Prevention Program have a documented evidence base. Ask what the behavioral methodology is, not just what the program covers. Cognitive behavioral training, for example, addresses the thought patterns and habits driving chronic disease risk across conditions, not just the downstream condition. That distinction matters at the two-to-three year horizon where lifestyle programs either pay back or don't.
3. Does it address root-cause behaviors or just symptoms? Medications manage chronic conditions. Behavior change can prevent them, slow progression, and in some cases reverse early-stage disease. Ask whether the program addresses nutrition, physical activity, stress, and sleep, or only the downstream condition.
4. How does it integrate with your existing benefits? A program that sits alongside your EAP, your telehealth, and your PBM without connecting to any of them adds to point-solution fatigue. Ask specifically about integration architecture.
5. What outcomes data does the vendor have, and how was it collected? Self-reported outcomes from vendor-selected clients are not the same as independent studies. Ask for methodology, sample size, and attrition rates.
6. What is the time horizon for ROI? Vendors claiming 3:1 ROI in year one on lifestyle programs are overstating the evidence. Ask what the realistic time horizon is and what the evidence shows at that horizon.
