Literature DB >> 32875915

Development of the Healthy Work Collaborative: Findings From an Action Research Study to Inform a Policy, Systems, and Environmental Change Capacity-Building Initiative Addressing Precarious Employment.

Christina Welter1, Elizabeth Jarpe-Ratner1, Tessa Bonney1, Eve C Pinsker1, Elizabeth Fisher1, Anna Yankelev2, Devangna Kapadia1, Marsha Love1, Joseph Zanoni1.   

Abstract

Precarious employment (PE) is a complex problem that affects an increasing number of workers across all economic sectors who experience low wages, hazardous conditions, and few benefits, and results in adverse health outcomes. PE is characterized by nontraditional work arrangements, precluding workplace-based interventions. Policy, systems, and environmental initiatives that engage cross-sectoral stakeholders may be an applicable health promotion approach to address PE. The University of of Illinois at Chicago Center for Healthy Work's Healthy Communities through Healthy Work (HCHW) is an outreach project of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health-funded Center of Excellence for Total Worker Health that conducted a multiphased qualitative action research (AR) study. AR designs may be a novel approach to develop initiatives to address problems like PE. This article reports on HCHW's first AR phase to answer four research questions: (1) What are participants' perceptions of PE? (2) What are participants' perceptions of their roles in addressing PE? (3) What initiatives are under way that address PE? and (4) How can the findings be used to facilitate opportunities for healthy work? Key informant interviews with health (public health and health care; N = 23) and labor sector organizations (worker centers, worker advocacy organizations, and unions; N = 21) were conducted. Data were thematically analyzed alongside a chart-based content analysis, and shared in 11 key stakeholder meetings. Findings revealed an opportunity for the labor sector to improve health sector readiness to address PE in the context of health, and were used to develop the Healthy Work Collaborative, a cross-sectoral health promotion capacity building policy, systems, and environmenta change initiative to address PE.

Entities:  

Keywords:  environmental and systems change; health promotion; partnerships and coalitions; program planning and evaluation; social determinants of health; social policy

Year:  2020        PMID: 32875915     DOI: 10.1177/1524839920953116

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Promot Pract        ISSN: 1524-8399


  1 in total

1.  Assessing Local Public Health Agency Alignment With Public Health 3.0: A Content Analysis of Illinois Community Health Improvement Plans.

Authors:  Christina R Welter; Yadira Herrera; Amber L Uskali; Steve Seweryn; Laurie Call; Samantha Lasky; Nelson Agbodo; Ngozi O Ezike
Journal:  J Public Health Manag Pract       Date:  2022 May-Jun 01
  1 in total

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