| Literature DB >> 31830955 |
Aikaterini Grimani1,2, Emmanuel Aboagye1, Lydia Kwak3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Healthy lifestyles play an important role in the prevention of premature death, chronic diseases, productivity loss and other social and economic concerns. However, workplace interventions to address issues of fitness and nutrition which include work-related outcomes are complex and thus challenging to implement and appropriately measure the effectiveness of. This systematic review investigated the impact of workplace nutrition and physical activity interventions, which include components aimed at workplace's physical environment and organizational structure, on employees' productivity, work performance and workability.Entities:
Keywords: Absenteeism; Fitness programs; Non-randomized controlled study designs; Nutritional interventions; Randomized controlled trials; Risk of bias; Work-related outcomes; Workplace health promotion interventions
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31830955 PMCID: PMC6909496 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-019-8033-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Flow Chart
Characteristics of the included studies (N = 39) and the interventions they studied. An extended table (Additional file 2) is available in an online annex. [RCT = Randomized controlled trial; NRS=Non-randomized controlled study]
| Categories | Variable | Number of studies |
|---|---|---|
| Level of intervention | Environmental | 4 [ |
| Multi-level: Organizational & Individual | 14 [ | |
| Multi-level: Environmental & Individual | 10 [ | |
| Multi-level: Environmental, Organizational & Individual | 11 [ | |
| Behavioral target of intervention | Physical Activity & Nutrition | 16 [ |
| Physical activity | 22 [ | |
| Nutrition | 1 [ | |
| Continent | Australia | 4 [ |
| USA | 18 [ | |
| Europe | 17 [ | |
| Sector/ industry | Health care provider or insurance | 9 [ |
| Services & administration | 10 [ | |
| Manufacturing | 4 [ | |
| Communication | 2 [ | |
| Education | 1 [ | |
| Multiple sectors | 13 [ | |
| Type of study | RCT | 19 [ |
| NRS | 20 [ | |
| Intervention duration | > 12 weeks | 4 [ |
| > 12 months | 10 [ | |
| ≤ 12 months | 22 [ | |
| Not stated | 3 [ | |
| Work-related outcomes | Absenteeism | 14 [ |
| Work performance | 5 [ | |
| Workability | 3 [ | |
| Productivity | 6 [ | |
| Multiple work-related outcomes | 11 [ | |
| Measurement of work-related outcomes | Objective measurement | 12 [ |
| Subjective measurement | 22 [ | |
| Both objective & subjective measurement | 5 [ | |
| Other outcomes | Health-related or other outcomes | 25 [ |
| Not stated | 14 [ |
Effective interventions on work-related outcomes
| Characteristics | Intervention | Primary outcomes | Secondary outcomes | Quality | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Environmental | Physical Activity | Ben-Ner, et al. [ | USA; RCT; 12 months; | Treadmill desk | Work performance (objective & subjective measurement) | Physical activity (objective measurement) | Unclear Risk of bias |
| Coffeng, et al. [ | Netherlands; RCT; | Social& physical environmental intervention | Work performance (subjective measurement) | N/A | Low Risk of bias | ||
| Gao, et al. [ | Finland; Quasi-experimental controlled study; 6 months; | Sit–stand workstations | Workability (subjective measurement) | Occupational sedentary time &musculoskeletal comfort (subjective measurement) | Moderate Risk of bias | ||
Multilevel Organizational, Individual | Physical Activity & Nutrition | Aldana, et al. [ | USA; Quasi-experimental controlled study; 24 months; | WCSD Wellness Program | Absenteeism (objective measurement) | N/A | Moderate Risk of bias |
| Lahiri and Faghri [ | USA; NRS; 16 weeks; | Incentivized Behavioral Weight Management Program | Productivity (subjective measurement) | Weight loss | Moderate Risk of bias | ||
| Loeppke, et al. [ | USA; NRS; 36 months; | Health enhancement program | Absenteeism (subjective measurement) | Health risks (subjective measurement) | Moderate Risk of bias | ||
| Schultz, et al. [ | USA; NRS; 36 months; | Workplace Health Promotion Program | Absenteeism (objective measurement) | N/A | Moderate Risk of bias | ||
| Physical Activity | von Thiele Schwarz and Hasson [ | Sweden; RCT; 12 months; | Physical Exercise (PE) | Workability (subjective measurement) | N/A | High Risk of bias | |
| von Thiele Schwarz, et al. [ | Sweden; quasi-experimental controlled study; 24 months; | Integration program | Workability &Productivity (subjective measurements) | Health promotion, Integration, Kaizen, health (self-reported measurements) | No Information | ||
Multilevel Environmental, Individual | Physical Activity | Jakobsen, et al. [ | Denmark; RCT; 10 weeks; | WORK (workplace physical exercise) | Workability (subjective measurement) | N/A | Low Risk of bias |
Multilevel Environmental, Organizational, Individual | Physical Activity & Nutrition | Bertera [ | USA; pretest/ posttest controlled study; 20 months; | Multicomponent program (with 41 intervention sites) | Absenteeism (objective measurement) | N/A | Moderate Risk of bias |
| Bertera [ | USA; pretest/ posttest controlled study; 24 months; | Multicomponent program | Absenteeism (subjective measurement) | Behavioral risk factors (subjective measurement) | No Information | ||
| Braun, et al. [ | UK; quasi-experimental controlled study; | Better Health atWork Award (Silver Award) | Absenteeism (objective measurement) | N/A | Moderate Risk of bias | ||
| Conrad, et al. [ | USA (Michigan); quasi-experimental controlled study; 24 months; | HRA, screening, counseling& Go to Health intervention program | Absenteeism (objective measurement) | N/A | Moderate Risk of bias | ||
| USA (Indiana); quasi-experimental controlled study; 8 years; | “Alive and Well” program& health check | Absenteeism (objective measurement) | N/A | Moderate Risk of bias | |||
| Jones, et al. [ | USA; NRS; 36 months; | LIVE FOR LIFE program | Absenteeism (objective measurement) | N/A | Moderate Risk of bias | ||
| Knight, et al. [ | USA; NRS; 36 months; | LIVE FOR LIFE program | Absenteeism (objective measurement) | N/A | No Information | ||
a: Effective on primary outcome(s)
b: Effective on primary and secondary outcomes