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Project A: Integrated Approaches to Improving the Health and Safety of Health Care Workers

6. května 2015 aktualizováno: Glorian Sorensen, Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH)

While most of the research on integrated approaches of occupational health and safety and worksite health promotion to date has focused on manufacturing settings, employment is shifting to the service sector. Within this sector, health care employs over 12 million workers, and is the second fastest growing industry in the U.S. economy. In contrast to workers in other industries, rates of occupational injuries and illnesses among health care workers have increased over the past decade. The purpose of this study is to lay the foundation for integrated interventions in health care through examination of the associations of worker health outcomes and risks on and off the job with work policies and practices and to address the prevalent issues of musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs), particularly low back pain disability (LBPD), and health promotions through physical activity among patient care workers. The specific aims of this study are:

  1. To estimate the efficacy and determine the feasibility of an integrated intervention, addressing both health protection and health promotion in order to reduce MSD symptoms and improve health behaviors among healthcare workers. We will assess between-group differences in MSD symptoms, health behaviors, including physical activity, and a set of secondary outcomes, including unplanned absence, reported injuries, worker compensation claims and costs, turnover and retention, intention to leave the job, and work-role function. This study will explore the working hypothesis that: Workers employed at baseline in patient-care units receiving the intervention will report greater reductions in their MSD symptoms (primary outcome) and greater improvements in health behaviors, compared with workers employed at baseline in units assigned to the Usual Care control group.
  2. To determine the factors in the work environment which contribute over time to reductions in MSD symptoms and improvements in safe and healthy behaviors. (1) The work environment, work organization, and psychosocial factors, measured in our current study, will be associated with changes in workers' health behaviors and health outcomes between the assessments in the current and proposed studies; (2) Improvements in the work environment over time will be associated with improvements in workers' health behaviors and health outcomes. We will conduct multilevel modeling analysis to evaluate the simultaneous effects of worker-level and unit-level factors on MSD symptoms and safety and health behaviors.

Přehled studie

Postavení

Dokončeno

Intervence / Léčba

Detailní popis

Improving and protecting the health and well-being of healthcare workers requires addressing key risks in the work environment as well as promoting safe and healthy behaviors. Healthcare workers are at elevated risk for musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs) due to a range of job factors, including lifting and transferring patients; working long hours (often at night); and limited control over decisions on the job. Among these, nurses and nurses aides bear the largest burden of injury. Back injuries in particular constitute the greatest source of their disability. These risks are likely to increase in coming years due to the aging nursing workforce, increase in work demands, and labor shortages. Health behaviors, including physical activity, inadequate sleep, and dietary patterns associated with being overweight or obese, are also influenced by the work environment and psychosocial factors on the job, and are also associated with MSD risk. Traditional approaches to redressing these risks have focused separately on health protection, including efforts to reduce MSD risk, and health promotion aimed at improving health behaviors. Little research has systematically examined the dual and potentially synergistic effects of the work environment on risk of MSDs and worker health behaviors, and there is insufficient evidence to determine the most efficacious ways to ameliorate the combined effects of these health risks. Our long-term goal is to improve the overall health and well-being of healthcare workers by making available evidence-based worksite policies, programs, and practices that foster a healthy work environment, reduce potential hazardous job exposures, and promote safe and healthy behaviors. The proposed study is the next logical step in building this evidence base. Factors in the work environment, including high work demands, low social support, and long work hours, have been shown to increase risk of MSDs, as well as risk-related behaviors. Yet little research has systematically explored these cross-cutting pathways and their implications for improving the effectiveness of worksite interventions to address the broad spectrum of worker health outcomes.

The proposed research provides a novel approach to worksite interventions that integrate occupational safety and health and worksite health promotion, taking into account the shared factors in the work environment shaping both MSDs and health behaviors. Standard approaches to occupational health and safety and worksite health promotion are based on a parallel structure of separate silos functioning relatively independently in the worksite, each drawing from their own disciplines and training experiences within public health. Although these parallel efforts share the common mission of improving worker health, their strategies are based on different assumptions about and approaches to improving worker health outcomes. The proposed research integrates these parallel approaches. Although our prior research has rigorously tested the efficacy of this integrated intervention model in changing worker health behaviors, to our knowledge no prior research has examined the impact of this integrated model on health outcomes associated with work exposures - here, notably, on MSD symptoms.

Typ studie

Intervenční

Zápis (Aktuální)

9500

Fáze

  • Nelze použít

Kontakty a umístění

Tato část poskytuje kontaktní údaje pro ty, kteří studii provádějí, a informace o tom, kde se tato studie provádí.

Studijní místa

    • Massachusetts
      • Boston, Massachusetts, Spojené státy, 02115
        • Brigham and Women's Hospital
      • Boston, Massachusetts, Spojené státy, 02114
        • Massachusetts General Hospital
      • Boston, Massachusetts, Spojené státy, 02115
        • Harvard School of Public Health

Kritéria účasti

Výzkumníci hledají lidi, kteří odpovídají určitému popisu, kterému se říká kritéria způsobilosti. Některé příklady těchto kritérií jsou celkový zdravotní stav osoby nebo předchozí léčba.

Kritéria způsobilosti

Věk způsobilý ke studiu

  • Dítě
  • Dospělý
  • Starší dospělý

Přijímá zdravé dobrovolníky

Ne

Pohlaví způsobilá ke studiu

Všechno

Popis

Inclusion criteria:

  • Adult and pediatric in-patient care units at Massachusetts General Hospital that have ceiling lifts in place (n=42 units) are eligible for the intervention.
  • Patient care workers, including registered nurses (RNs), licensed practical nurses (LPNs), patient care assistants (PCAs)/nursing assistants (NAs) and Nurse Leaders working in in-patient units for at least 20 hours per week (n= 9500).
  • Of those patient care workers, those working in adult and pediatric in-patient care units (n=90 units) are eligible to be randomly selected for surveys.

Exclusion criteria:

N/A

Studijní plán

Tato část poskytuje podrobnosti o studijním plánu, včetně toho, jak je studie navržena a co studie měří.

Jak je studie koncipována?

Detaily designu

  • Přidělení: Randomizované
  • Intervenční model: Přiřazení jedné skupiny
  • Maskování: Žádné (otevřený štítek)

Zbraně a zásahy

Skupina účastníků / Arm
Intervence / Léčba
Žádný zásah: Řízení
Žádný zásah
Experimentální: Intervention
Be Well Work Well

The intervention follows principles for integrated approaches to promoting and protecting worker health. It will occur on 4 inpatient units at Massachusetts General Hospital beginning in January 2013, and will continue for 1 year.

Overall intervention objectives:

  1. Motivate individual staff members to engage in targeted health and safety behavior changes;
  2. build awareness of ergonomic and safety hazards and of opportunities for healthy dietary choices and physical activity;
  3. facilitate unit-level norms supportive of breaks, safe patient handling, and targeted health and safety behaviors; and
  4. promote co-worker and supervisor support for targeted health and safety behaviors.
Ostatní jména:
  • OSH protection and health promotion program

Co je měření studie?

Primární výstupní opatření

Měření výsledku
Popis opatření
Časové okno
Pain
Časové okno: Baseline and 1 year
  • Musculoskeletal disorder pain
  • Self-report via survey
Baseline and 1 year
Physical Activity
Časové okno: Baseline and 1 year
Self-report via survey
Baseline and 1 year
Diet
Časové okno: Baseline and 1 year
Self-report via survey
Baseline and 1 year
Sleep
Časové okno: Baseline and 1 year
Self-report via survey
Baseline and 1 year

Sekundární výstupní opatření

Měření výsledku
Popis opatření
Časové okno
Safe patient handling
Časové okno: Baseline and 1 year
Self-report via survey
Baseline and 1 year
Work role function/limitations
Časové okno: Baseline and 1 year
Self-report via survey
Baseline and 1 year
BMI/obesity
Časové okno: Baseline and 1 year
Self-report via survey
Baseline and 1 year

Další výstupní opatření

Měření výsledku
Popis opatření
Časové okno
Economic/systems outcomes
Časové okno: Baseline and 1 year
  • Unplanned absence
  • Reported injuries
  • Worker compensation
  • Turnover/retention
  • Healthcare utilization/costs

Self-report via survey

Baseline and 1 year

Spolupracovníci a vyšetřovatelé

Zde najdete lidi a organizace zapojené do této studie.

Vyšetřovatelé

  • Vrchní vyšetřovatel: Glorian Sorensen, PhD, MPH, Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH)

Publikace a užitečné odkazy

Osoba odpovědná za zadávání informací o studiu tyto publikace poskytuje dobrovolně. Mohou se týkat čehokoli, co souvisí se studiem.

Obecné publikace

Termíny studijních záznamů

Tato data sledují průběh záznamů studie a předkládání souhrnných výsledků na ClinicalTrials.gov. Záznamy ze studií a hlášené výsledky jsou před zveřejněním na veřejné webové stránce přezkoumány Národní lékařskou knihovnou (NLM), aby se ujistily, že splňují specifické standardy kontroly kvality.

Hlavní termíny studia

Začátek studia

1. dubna 2012

Primární dokončení (Aktuální)

1. června 2014

Dokončení studie (Aktuální)

1. června 2014

Termíny zápisu do studia

První předloženo

19. března 2013

První předloženo, které splnilo kritéria kontroly kvality

24. dubna 2013

První zveřejněno (Odhad)

29. dubna 2013

Aktualizace studijních záznamů

Poslední zveřejněná aktualizace (Odhad)

7. května 2015

Odeslaná poslední aktualizace, která splnila kritéria kontroly kvality

6. května 2015

Naposledy ověřeno

1. května 2015

Více informací

Termíny související s touto studií

Další identifikační čísla studie

  • U19OH008861 (Grant/smlouva NIH USA)

Tyto informace byly beze změn načteny přímo z webu clinicaltrials.gov. Máte-li jakékoli požadavky na změnu, odstranění nebo aktualizaci podrobností studie, kontaktujte prosím register@clinicaltrials.gov. Jakmile bude změna implementována na clinicaltrials.gov, bude automaticky aktualizována i na našem webu .

Klinické studie na Be Well Work Well

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