| Literature DB >> 33036154 |
Bozana Arapovic-Johansson1, Irene Jensen1, Charlotte Wåhlin1,2, Christina Björklund1, Lydia Kwak1.
Abstract
This study is a process evaluation of a trial examining the effects of an organizational intervention (Productivity Measurement and Enhancement System or ProMES) on employee stress. The aims were to explore the implementation process and fidelity to the intervention guidelines, examine the influence of contextual factors (hindrances and facilitators) and explore participants' experience of working with ProMES. We used the UK Medical Research Council (MRC) guidance to guide the process evaluation. The recruitment, reach and dose delivered were satisfactory and participation high. The employees felt ProMES clarified priorities, gave control and increased participation in decision-making. However, difficulty in obtaining statistical productivity data from the central administration office (a central feature of the intervention) hindered full implementation and regular feedback meetings. Staffing shortages interfered with the implementation process, while having seven design teams and one consultant prevented all occupational groups from working simultaneously. A detailed examination of access to necessary organizational data should be undertaken before implementing ProMES. We recommend a better introduction for new employees, more work on design and packaging and giving employees more training in how to use the software program. The study contributes to our understanding of process evaluations in research into organizational stress management interventions.Entities:
Keywords: Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research; implementation; mixed method design; organizational level intervention; primary health care; process evaluation
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33036154 PMCID: PMC7579215 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17197285
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Logic model of ProMES/Theory of Change.
| Problem and Evidence Base | Resources | Activities/Strategies/Core Components of ProMES | Method | Short-Term Outcomes | Medium-Term Outcomes | Long-Term Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Preconditions | Management | 0. Activities before starting ProMES | Checklists | |||
| Some work-related factors are known to be risk factors for ill-health: absence of influence and control, insufficient interaction with co-workers, unclear and conflicting tasks, insufficient participation in decision-making, low esteem reward, and insufficient feedback | Experienced ProMES fascilitator | 1. Initial meetings | (1) Participative decision making with regard to demands, i.e. which work results need to be improved and how much; | Controllable and acceptable demands. | Primary outcome: Lower levels of job strain. | Lower occurrence of common mental disorders such as: |
Figure 1Key functions of the process evaluation and the frameworks used (after UK Medical Research Council (MRC) guidance [5]).
Process evaluation items, examples of questions and methods of measurement.
| Process Evaluation Items | Examples of Specific Questions | Methods of Measurement |
|---|---|---|
| Implementation | ||
| Recruitment | Who recruited the participating units and how? | Administrative data, project logbook. |
| Dose delivered | Frequency and duration of meetings. | Administrative data, poject logbook. |
| Reach | What percent of employees in the participating unit participated in ProMES? | Administrative data, project logbook, 2 questions from questionnaire. |
| Fidelity and adaptation | To what extent was ProMES implemented as intended (according to manual)? | Project logbook, checklists, information from interviews. |
| Mechanism of impact | ||
| Participant responses | How satisfied are the employees with the content, work procedures, delivery. Their opinion of ProMES’s appropriateness/usefulness, acceptability, feasibility, sustainability. | Questionnaire. |
| Context | Which factors/circumstances have either facilitated or hindered working with ProMES? | Semi-structured interviews. |