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Workplace restructurings in intervention studies – a challenge for design, analysis and interpretation

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TLDR
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.
Abstract
Interventions in occupational health often target worksites rather than individuals. The objective of this paper is to describe the (lack of) stability in units of analysis in occupational health and safety intervention projects directed toward worksites. A case study approach is used to describe naturally occurring organizational changes in four, large, Nordic intervention projects that ran 3–5 years, covered 3–52 worksites, cost 0.25 mill–2.2 mill €, and involved 3–7 researchers. In all four cases, high rates of closing, merging, moving, downsizing or restructuring was observed, and in all four cases at least one company/worksite experienced two or more re-organizations during the project period. If individual worksites remained, ownership or (for publicly owned) administrative or legal base often shifted. Forthcoming closure led employees and managers to seek employment at other worksites participating in the studies. Key employees involved in the intervention process often changed. Major changes were the rule rather than the exception. Frequent fundamental changes at worksites need to be taken into account when planning intervention studies and raises serious questions concerning design, analyses and interpretation of results. The frequent changes may also have deleterious implications for the potential effectiveness of many real life interventions directed toward worksites. We urge researchers and editors to prioritize this subject in order to improve the quality of future intervention research and preventive action.

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Changing Work and Work-Family Conflict: Evidence from the Work, Family, and Health Network*

TL;DR: A group-randomized trial in which some units in an information technology workplace were randomly assigned to participate in an initiative that targeted work practices, interactions, and expectations by training supervisors on the value of demonstrating support for employees’ personal lives and prompting employees to reconsider when and where they work is used.
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Occupational musculoskeletal and mental health: Significance of rationalization and opportunities to create sustainable production systems ― A systematic review

TL;DR: It is concluded that production system rationalization represents a pervasive work life intervention without a primary occupational health focus and has considerable and mostly negative influence on worker health, but this can be reduced by attention to modifiers.
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Worksite Wellness Programs for Cardiovascular Disease Prevention A Policy Statement From the American Heart Association

TL;DR: The American Heart Association supports incremental efforts to achieve a comprehensive worksite wellness program to address CVD and stroke prevention and makes the following recommendations.
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Workplace mental health: developing an integrated intervention approach

TL;DR: An integrated approach to workplace mental health combines the strengths of medicine, public health, and psychology, and has the potential to optimise both the prevention and management of mental health problems in the workplace.
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Effects of organisational-level interventions at work on employees’ health: a systematic review

TL;DR: Despite the heterogeneity of the 39 organisational-level workplace interventions underlying this review, it is able to compare their effects by applying broad classification categories and found success rates were higher among more comprehensive interventions tackling material, organisational and work-time related conditions simultaneously.
References
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Book

Case Study Research: Design and Methods

Robert K. Yin
TL;DR: In this article, buku ini mencakup lebih dari 50 studi kasus, memberikan perhatian untuk analisis kuantitatif, membahas lebah lengkap penggunaan desain metode campuran penelitian, and termasuk wawasan metodologi baru.
Journal ArticleDOI

CONSORT statement: extension to cluster randomised trials

TL;DR: This paper provides updated and extended guidance, based on the 2010 version of the CONSORT statement and the 2008consORT statement for the reporting of abstracts, on how to report the results of cluster randomised controlled trials.
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Evidence-Based Public Health: Moving Beyond Randomized Trials

TL;DR: There is an urgent need to develop evaluation standards and protocols for use in circumstances where RCTs are not appropriate, and both the internal and external validity of RCT findings can be greatly enhanced by observational studies using adequacy or plausibility designs.
Journal ArticleDOI

What influences recruitment to randomised controlled trials? A review of trials funded by two UK funding agencies.

TL;DR: Factors that may have been associated with good and poor recruitment in a cohort of multicentre trials funded by two public bodies, identified from the administrative databases held by the two funding bodies, are explored.
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