and weight goes too far, inquiring about personal ailments, depression, use of tobacco. one reads have you had five or more alcoholic drinks in a single sitting in the last six months? men are asked do you do a monthly testicular self exam. the school says all information is confidential. critics aren t so sure, worry about hacking and other forms of disclosure. professor wesner says his solution is civil disobedience. i say they fill out the profiles and fill them with junk. in my profile, 3 8 and 50 pounds. reporter: it includes a physical exam. the purpose to lower the cost of employee health care. some health care experts argue what penn state is doing often costs more money than it saves. this is not penn state doing this to their employees for
tobacco. one question asks men do you do a monthly testicular self-exam. the school says all information will be confidential but some employees have their doubts. whatever advantages there may be in getting a few employees to live healthier lives is putting the privacy of all employees at risk. the school says the questionnaire is part of a wellness program hopes will lower emilyee healthcare cost. in a statement school said and i quote. programs similar to this already are a common practice in the for-profit world. some medical experts say wellness programs often cost more money that they save. the penn state program though is especially controversial because, instead of trying to reward participation, employees are penalized for noncompliance. the school s faculty, staff and administration have until october to take part in the survey or start paying that monthly fine. shepard? david lee, penn state leaders report the school picks up more than 80% of its employees healthcare c