Literature DB >> 27082022

Supporting employees' work-family needs improves health care quality: Longitudinal evidence from long-term care.

Cassandra A Okechukwu1, Erin L Kelly2, Janine Bacic3, Nicole DePasquale4, David Hurtado5, Ellen Kossek6, Grace Sembajwe7.   

Abstract

We analyzed qualitative and quantitative data from U.S.-based employees in 30 long-term care facilities. Analysis of semi-structured interviews from 154 managers informed quantitative analyses. Quantitative data include 1214 employees' scoring of their supervisors and their organizations on family supportiveness (individual scores and aggregated to facility level), and three outcomes: (1), care quality indicators assessed at facility level (n = 30) and collected monthly for six months after employees' data collection; (2), employees' dichotomous survey response on having additional off-site jobs; and (3), proportion of employees with additional jobs at each facility. Thematic analyses revealed that managers operate within the constraints of an industry that simultaneously: (a) employs low-wage employees with multiple work-family challenges, and (b) has firmly institutionalized goals of prioritizing quality of care and minimizing labor costs. Managers universally described providing work-family support and prioritizing care quality as antithetical to each other. Concerns surfaced that family-supportiveness encouraged employees to work additional jobs off-site, compromising care quality. Multivariable linear regression analysis of facility-level data revealed that higher family-supportive supervision was associated with significant decreases in residents' incidence of all pressure ulcers (-2.62%) and other injuries (-9.79%). Higher family-supportive organizational climate was associated with significant decreases in all falls (-17.94%) and falls with injuries (-7.57%). Managers' concerns about additional jobs were not entirely unwarranted: multivariable logistic regression of employee-level data revealed that among employees with children, having family-supportive supervision was associated with significantly higher likelihood of additional off-site jobs (RR 1.46, 95%CI 1.08-1.99), but family-supportive organizational climate was associated with lower likelihood (RR 0.76, 95%CI 0.59-0.99). However, proportion of workers with additional off-site jobs did not significantly predict care quality at facility levels. Although managers perceived providing work-family support and ensuring high care quality as conflicting goals, results suggest that family-supportiveness is associated with better care quality.
Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Long-term care; Low-wage workers; Multi-method design; Occupational health; Organizational climate; USA; Work-family conflict; Work-family support

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27082022      PMCID: PMC4848161          DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2016.03.031

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  29 in total

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Authors:  Jeanne Geiger-Brown; Alison M Trinkoff
Journal:  J Nurs Adm       Date:  2010-03       Impact factor: 1.737

2.  Designing Work, Family & Health Organizational Change Initiatives.

Authors:  Ellen Ernst Kossek; Leslie B Hammer; Erin L Kelly; Phyllis Moen
Journal:  Organ Dyn       Date:  2014

3.  What's the relative risk? A method of correcting the odds ratio in cohort studies of common outcomes.

Authors:  J Zhang; K F Yu
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  1998-11-18       Impact factor: 56.272

4.  Changing Work and Work-Family Conflict: Evidence from the Work, Family, and Health Network*

Authors:  Erin L Kelly; Phyllis Moen; J Michael Oakes; Wen Fan; Cassandra Okechukwu; Kelly D Davis; Leslie Hammer; Ellen Kossek; Rosalind Berkowitz King; Ginger Hanson; Frank Mierzwa; Lynne Casper
Journal:  Am Sociol Rev       Date:  2014-06-01

5.  An Integrative, Multilevel, and Transdisciplinary Research Approach to Challenges of Work, Family, and Health.

Authors:  Jeremy W Bray; Erin L Kelly; Leslie B Hammer; David M Almeida; James W Dearing; Rosalind B King; Orfeu M Buxton
Journal:  Methods Rep RTI Press       Date:  2013-03

6.  Getting There from Here: Research on the Effects of Work-Family Initiatives on Work-Family Conflict and Business Outcomes.

Authors:  Erin L Kelly; Ellen Ernst Kossek; Leslie B Hammer; Mary Durham; Jeremy Bray; Kelly Chermack; Lauren A Murphy; Dan Kaskubar
Journal:  Acad Manag Ann       Date:  2008-08

7.  Clarifying work-family intervention processes: the roles of work-family conflict and family-supportive supervisor behaviors.

Authors:  Leslie B Hammer; Ellen Ernst Kossek; W Kent Anger; Todd Bodner; Kristi L Zimmerman
Journal:  J Appl Psychol       Date:  2011-01

8.  Measurement development and validation of the Family Supportive Supervisor Behavior Short-Form (FSSB-SF).

Authors:  Leslie B Hammer; Ellen Ernst Kossek; Todd Bodner; Tori Crain
Journal:  J Occup Health Psychol       Date:  2013-06-03

9.  Relationship of sleep deficiency to perceived pain and functional limitations in hospital patient care workers.

Authors:  Orfeu M Buxton; Karen Hopcia; Grace Sembajwe; James H Porter; Jack T Dennerlein; Christopher Kenwood; Anne M Stoddard; Dean Hashimoto; Glorian Sorensen
Journal:  J Occup Environ Med       Date:  2012-07       Impact factor: 2.162

Review 10.  Quality of care in for-profit and not-for-profit nursing homes: systematic review and meta-analysis.

Authors:  Vikram R Comondore; P J Devereaux; Qi Zhou; Samuel B Stone; Jason W Busse; Nikila C Ravindran; Karen E Burns; Ted Haines; Bernadette Stringer; Deborah J Cook; Stephen D Walter; Terrence Sullivan; Otavio Berwanger; Mohit Bhandari; Sarfaraz Banglawala; John N Lavis; Brad Petrisor; Holger Schünemann; Katie Walsh; Neera Bhatnagar; Gordon H Guyatt
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2009-08-04
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  1 in total

1.  How to ask: Surveying nursing directors of nursing homes.

Authors:  Jessica A R Williams; Mary G Vriniotis; Daniel A Gundersen; Leslie I Boden; Jamie E Collins; Jeffrey N Katz; Gregory R Wagner; Glorian Sorensen
Journal:  Health Sci Rep       Date:  2021-06-04
  1 in total

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