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There is an urgent need for evidence-based interventions to reduce risk of musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs) and improve health and safety behaviors for low-income workers. Upstream interventions addressing these organizational characteristics and work experiences may be especially effective in preventing adverse health outcomes because they address underlying sources of elevated risk particularly important for low-wage workers. Low-wage workers have less schedule control, more irregular working hours, and shortened breaks due to time pressure to complete work tasks. The objective is to develop and test feasible intervention methods to modify the work organization and contribute to reductions in MSD risk, and improvements work-related well-being and job satisfaction. First, this study will identify characteristics of the work organization that can be feasibly modified through changes in management practices, based on interviews with food service managers and focus groups with workers. Second, the investigators will determine the feasibility and potential efficacy of an integrated TWH intervention in improving workers' ergonomic practices, MSD symptom, as well as in changing the work organization and environment related to work-related well-being and job satisfaction.
The contribution of this study will be significant because it is expected to contribute to reducing disparities in these health outcomes by directly intervening on an underlying source of these disparities.
Full description
The food service industry employs 9.5 million workers in the U.S, many of whom are at elevated risk for a range of poor health outcomes. NIOSH's Total Worker Health™ (TWH) Program provides an innovative approach for addressing the shared pathways in the work organization and environment that impact both MSD risk and health and safety behaviors. This study takes advantage of an unusual opportunity to demonstrate the impact of changes in the work organization in collaboration with an industry partner that has committed to making such changes in concert with this study. Our central hypothesis is that an intervention targeting the work organization, as well as the work environment will show promising improvements in MSD outcomes and improvements in work-related well-being and job satisfaction.
The Specific Aims of this study include:
This PoC intervention will be tested in10 food service worksites randomly assigned to intervention and control. The 13-month intervention will target changes in the organizational and physical work environment and management practices, and supporting safe ergonomic practices and factors related to work-related wellbeing and job satisfaction. The investigators will compare differences between intervention and control sites in changes between pre- and post-intervention in worker health and safety behaviors and MSD symptoms through surveys of workers, and in the work organization and environment through manager surveys and on-site walk-through's. A rigorous process evaluation will be used to assess intervention feasibility. The contribution of this study will be significant because it is expected to contribute to reducing disparities in these health outcomes by directly intervening on an underlying source of these disparities.
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197 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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