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Intervention studies in the health care work environment : Lessons learned

TLDR
Five different methods of integration are proposed: a qualitative approach as a foundation for the design of a quantitative study, qualitative studies to gain deeper insight and better analyses of the results from a qualitative study, quantitative research to study frequencies and distributions of phenomena discovered by qualitative approaches, parallel and integrated use of qualitative and quantitative approaches, and quantifying qualitative data.
Abstract
The old controversy between qualitative and quantitative approaches to the study of workplace stressors and workers ́ health may be bypassed by looking at them as complementary to each other. Especially, intervention research would profit from the integrated use of both approaches when it comes to validity and reliability of the data. This applies to assessment of both the work and health related problems as well as the effects of the intervention. Also quite practical issues must be considered, such as the question of status for the two approaches within the research group, the possibility to integrate the two methods, not only conduct them in separate and parallel processes, and the sequencing of the approaches. Five different methods of integration are proposed: 1) a qualitative approach as a foundation for the design of a quantitative study, 2) qualitative studies to gain deeper insight and better analyses of the results from a quantitative study, 3) quantitative research to study frequencies and distributions of phenomena discovered by qualitative approaches, 4) parallel and integrated use of qualitative and quantitative approaches, and 5) quantifying qualitative data.

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Reliability, validity, and health issues arising from questionnaires used to measure Psychosocial and Organizational Work Factors (POWFs) among hospital nurses: a critical review.

TL;DR: The Practice Environment Scale–Nursing Work Index (PES–NWI) seems to be one of the most promising instruments because of its appropriateness, its structure, which has a rather good fit, and its ability to discriminate magnet hospitals like other NWI derivates (discriminant validity).
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Workplace restructurings in intervention studies – a challenge for design, analysis and interpretation

TL;DR: The (lack of) stability in units of analysis in occupational health and safety intervention projects directed toward worksites is described to raise serious questions concerning design, analyses and interpretation of results.
Journal ArticleDOI

Do psychosocial strain and physical exertion predict onset of low-back pain among nursing aides?

TL;DR: The results of the analyses with time lag (longitudinal) did not support the hypothesis that psychosocial and physical strain from 1 day of work predicts pain onset the following day, but physical exertion, stress, and, to some extent, time pressure were associated with pain on the day of onset.
Journal ArticleDOI

Age related work load—a work environment intervention with a life course perspective

TL;DR: The results showed that the experience of workload, ergonomic troubles, psychosocial troubles and work stress had decreased at the same time as theExperience of stimulation and of joy at work had increased.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Satisfaction, stress, and performance: Issues for occupational psychology in the ‘caring’ professions

Don Wallis
- 01 Apr 1987 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the objectives of occupational psychology are touched upon and a higher priority than hitherto for studies of professional workers employed in health and "caring" organizations, as distinct from industry and commerce, is argued for.
Journal ArticleDOI

One Pain or Many Pains

Fernando Cervero, +1 more
- 01 Dec 1991 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed that the word "pain" is used to describe a wide range of unpleasant sensory experiences and that all forms of pain can be attributed to a single neurological mechanism.
Journal ArticleDOI

Muscle pain and coping with working life in Norway: A review

TL;DR: In this article, a review of the current research initiated by the Norwegian Research Council for Science and Humanities aimed at improving Health and Living Conditions (HEMIL) is presented.