| Literature DB >> 18718981 |
M Egan1, C Bambra, M Petticrew, M Whitehead.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The reporting of intervention implementation in studies included in systematic reviews of organisational-level workplace interventions was appraised. Implementation is taken to include such factors as intervention setting, resources, planning, collaborations, delivery and macro-level socioeconomic contexts. Understanding how implementation affects intervention outcomes may help prevent erroneous conclusions and misleading assumptions about generalisability, but implementation must be adequately reported if it is to be taken into account.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18718981 PMCID: PMC2596297 DOI: 10.1136/jech.2007.071233
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Epidemiol Community Health ISSN: 0143-005X Impact factor: 3.710
Details of the interventions included in the four systematic reviews
| Interventions | Descriptions |
| Employee participation review | |
| Employee participation committees | Employee representative committees (described variously, eg action teams, problem solving committees, etc). These often focus on identifying and suggesting ways of overcoming workplace stressors. Some committees are led by external facilitators and/or have managerial representation. |
| Flexible working hours | Employees are given more control over choosing their working hours. |
| Participation and individual-level interventions | Employee committees combined with individual-level health promotion, education and behaviour programmes: such as anti-smoking or physical activity interventions and training in relaxation techniques, stress reduction and communication skills. |
| Participation and ergonomic interventions | Participatory committees combined with ergonomic interventions, ie attempts to reduce physical discomfort and workplace injuries by modifying physical environments (including technological improvements) and advising on posture and lifting. |
| Task restructuring review | |
| Production line | Production line interventions that increase the variety of tasks performed by a worker, increase the skills utilised and place more responsibility on individual workers. |
| Primary nursing | Increasing the skills utilised by workers by increasing the variety of work tasks. Primary nursing and personal caregiving are patient-orientated care systems in which each patient is assigned to an individual nurse/carer; the nurse/carer takes 24-hour responsibility for the care of that patient including the planning and quality of the care provided. |
| Team working | Workers are given more collective responsibility and decision-making power within the team, but responsibility is not shared and supervisory structures remain in place. |
| Lean production | Employee workloads are maximised, wasted time is reduced, tasks are distributed within the team, and work standards are determined by the employees themselves rather than solely by management. |
| “Just in time” | “Just in time” requires that products are made “just in time” to be sold—no stockpiling of products. Work groups, not individuals, are given autonomy and responsibility for specific tasks in order to achieve the required production flow. |
| Autonomous work groups | Autonomous work groups are characterised by employee self-determination and involvement in the management of day-to-day work (including control over pace, task distribution and training and recruitment). |
| Compressed working week review | |
| Compressed working week (CWW) | Hours worked per day are increased while the days worked are decreased in order to work the standard number of weekly hours in less than 5 days, eg the |
| Shift work review | |
| Changes affecting shift rotation | eg 1. Changing from slow to fast rotation: a change from six or seven consecutive shifts of the same type to a maximum of three or four. |
| eg 2. Changing from backward (night, afternoon, morning) to forward (morning, afternoon, night) rotation or vice versa. | |
| eg 3. Changing from a rotating shift system to a permanent shift system. | |
| Changes affecting night work | eg 1. Removal of night shifts. |
| eg 2. Increasing the rest period before the rotation onto night shift. | |
| eg 3. Reduction in the number of consecutive night shifts. | |
| Later start and finish times | Starting and finishing shifts 1 hour (in the studies we identified) later. |
| Weekend shift changes | Continuous (weekends on) to discontinuous shift system (weekends off) or vice versa. |
| Decreased hours | Decrease in shift length (eg from 8 hours to 6 hours). |
| Self-scheduling | Self-scheduling enables individual shift workers to have some control over which shifts they work, their start times or when their rest days occur. |
| Combined shift interventions | Combinations of the above, most usually shift rotation combinations, eg change to fast and forward rotation. |
Thematic checklist for the appraisal of the reporting, planning and implementation of workplace interventions
| Theme | Checklist question for workplace reviews |
| 1. Motivation | Does the study describe why the management decided to subject the employee population to the organisational change? |
| 2. Theory of change | Was the intervention design influenced by a theory of change describing the proposed pathway from implementation to health outcome? |
| 3. Implementation context | Does the study provide any useful contextual information relevant to the implementation of the intervention (eg political, economic or managerial factors)? |
| 4. Experience | Does the study establish whether those implementing the intervention had appropriate experience (eg had the implementers conducted similar interventions before; or, if managers/employees were involved, were they appropriately trained for the new roles)? |
| 5. Planning consultations | Is there a report of consultation/collaboration processes between managers, employees and any other relevant parties during the planning stage? |
| 6. Delivery collaborations | Is there a report of consultation/collaboration processes between managers, employees and any other relevant parties during the delivery stage? |
| 7. Manager support | Were on-site managers/supervisors supportive of the intervention (eg do the authors comment on managers’ views of intervention)? |
| 8. Employee support | Were employees supportive of the intervention (eg do the authors comment on employees’ views of intervention)? |
| 9. Resources | Does the study give information about the resources required in implementing the intervention (eg time, money, people, equipment)? |
| 10. Differential effects and population characteristics* | Does the study provide information on the characteristics of the people for whom the intervention was beneficial, and the characteristics of those for whom it was harmful or ineffective? |
*Note that, while consideration of differential effects involves analysis of outcomes, it also provides contextual information on the characteristics of population subgroups. This is of interest when exploring the transferability of research findings and the mechanisms by which some interventions affect different types of people in different ways. Hence, we regard this issue as relevant to explorations of implementation and context (as well as to outcome analysis).
Numerical summary of the results of the implementation appraisal checklist
| All reviews (excluding duplicates) | Task variety | Employment participation | Compressed working week | Shift work | |
| Total number of studies | 103 | 21 | 18 | 40 | 26 |
| Mean implementation score | 2.6 | 2.6 | 3.4 | 2.3 | 2.4 |
| Median implementation score | 3 | 3 | 4 | 2 | 2.5 |
| Studies with lowest implementation score (0,1,2) | 51 | 9 | 4 | 26 | 13 |
| Studies with intermediate implementation score (3,4) | 38 | 10 | 10 | 8 | 11 |
| Studies with higher implementation score (⩾5) | 14 | 2 | 4 | 6 | 2 |
Examples of implementation appraisal summaries (higher scoring studies only)
| Citation | Intervention, study design and population details | Implementation details* | Score |
| Employee participation review | |||
| Park | Participatory committee to improve team communication and cohesiveness, work scheduling, conflict resolution and employee rewards | (1) Researcher initiated to act as a buffer against the adverse effects of recession and uncertainty | 6 |
| Prospective repeat cross-sectional study | (2) Explicitly inspired by theories of psychosocial work reorganisation | ||
| All employees, retail store, USA | (3) Implementation took place during a period of recession and uncertainty | ||
| (5) Professional facilitator assisted with delivery | |||
| (6) Employee representative liaised with management and employees | |||
| (10) Psychosocial improvements for black and Hispanic, but not white, employees | |||
| Mikkelsen and Saksvik (1999) | Conference on working conditions followed by supervisor and employee work groups meeting 2 hours a week, nine times: intervention was moderated by consultants | (1) To improve workplace health | 6 |
| Prospective cohort study with comparison group | (2) Explicitly inspired by theories of psychosocial work reorganisation | ||
| Manual and clerical workers, Post Office depot, Norway | (3) Company undergoing downsizing for financial reasons | ||
| (5) Researchers, managers and union representatives helped design the intervention | |||
| (7) Management supported the intervention | |||
| (8) Union representatives supported the intervention, but the authors report that, in one department, the intervention was neither successfully implemented nor effective, because steering group members lost interest, and personnel were relocated or made redundant | |||
| Task restructuring review | |||
| Wall | Increased operator control on production line | (1) Introduced to increase staff performance | 5 |
| Prospective cohort | (2) Explicitly inspired by theories of psychosocial work reorganisation | ||
| Manual workers, factory floor, UK | (4) Training was provided | ||
| (6) Representative of employees of all grades, and the researchers were involved in a working party overseeing the implementation of the intervention | |||
| (8) Some employees were resistant to the intervention | |||
| Wall | Autonomous work groups | (1) Intervention occurred in a purpose-built factory that was designed with increasing factory floor responsibility and job redesign in mind | 5 |
| Prospective cohort | (2) Underpinned by theory about job redesign | ||
| Manual and shop floor supervisors, factory floor, UK | (4) Training on intervention was provided | ||
| (6) Researchers were not involved in the design or implementation of the intervention | |||
| (8) Employee support for the intervention was mixed | |||
| Compressed working week review | |||
| Williams (1992) | Six/seven 8-hour shifts, 2/4 days off to three/four 12-hour shifts, 2–7 days off | (1) Intervention initiated by staff to improve their work/life balance. 90% of staff were dissatisfied with the old system and other local factories had started using 12-hour shifts | 7 |
| Prospective cohort | (3) Pressure from staff led to a management review of different shift schedules with the most popular schedule adopted. 83% voted for the implemented system | ||
| Operators, chemical plant, USA | (4) Managers went on “fact finding” visits to 12-hour factories to learn about safety implications and how best to implement the change | ||
| (5) Staff input central to the planning and consultation process | |||
| (6) Key delivery collaborations between staff, union and managers aided implementation | |||
| (7) Managers were supportive of the intervention | |||
| (8) Union was supportive of the intervention | |||
| Wootten (2000a,b) | 7.5-hour to 12-hour shifts | (1) Introduced to improve staff health and well-being | 7 |
| Retrospective cohort | (2) Explicitly inspired by theories of psychosocial work reorganisation | ||
| Nurses, hospital, UK | (4) Colleagues who had implemented similar changes elsewhere were consulted | ||
| (5) Staff were consulted over the change | |||
| (6) Implemented via collaborations between staff, supervisors and unions | |||
| (7) Managers were initially hesitant but then agreed | |||
| (8) 75% of staff agreed to a pilot | |||
| Brinton (1983) | Five 8-hour shifts, 2 days off to four 12-hour shifts, 3/4 days off | (1) Workers’ idea | 7 |
| Retrospective repeat cross-section | (2) Explicitly inspired by theories of psychosocial work reorganisation | ||
| Wood yard workers, paper mill, USA | (3) Flexibility needed by both union and management to get the new system implemented | ||
| (5) New system designed and agreed with the union | |||
| (6) Committee set up between the union and managers to monitor safety in the new system | |||
| (7) Supported by supervisors. Company management agreed that they would implement the change if a majority of the workforce supported it | |||
| (8) Supported by the union | |||
| Changes to shift work | |||
| Gauderer and Knauth (2004) | Self-scheduling of shifts | (1) Introduced to improve the ergonomic design of shifts by involving drivers in their own scheduling | 5 |
| Prospective cohort with comparison group | (2) Explicitly inspired by theories of psychosocial work reorganisation | ||
| Bus drivers, public transport depot, Germany | (4) Those involved in implementation collected information from other companies that had experienced a similar intervention. Workers attended training workshops to learn how to design their own schedules | ||
| (5) Staff, managers and researchers involved in designing the system | |||
| (8) Workers’ council voted in favour of the change and, at the end of the 1-year trial period, workers voted to keep the new system | |||
| Kandolin and Huida (1996) | Slow to fast rotation; backward to forward rotation; self-scheduling of shifts | (1) Introduced to reduce fatigue by decreasing the number of “quick returns” and changing to a forward rotation. Aimed to increase the role of midwives in their own scheduling | 6 |
| Prospective cohort with comparison group | (3) Only a third of the midwives said that they had actually experienced a change to forward rotation, but more experienced less quick returns on the new system. A higher proportion of staff now participated in their own scheduling | ||
| Midwives, hospital, Finland | (4) Managers had previous experience | ||
| (5) Managers carried out the rescheduling | |||
| (6) Managers carried out the rescheduling | |||
| (8) 55% said they preferred the old system because ofthe longer continuous free time | |||
*1 = Motivation; 2 = Theory; 3 = Context; 4 = Experience; 5 = Planning; 6 = Delivery; 7 = Managerial response; 8 = Employee response; 9 = Resources; 10 = Differential effects and population characteristics (see table 2 for more details).