Wounds and Injuries Clinical Trial
Official title:
Creating Health and Safety Communities of Practice for Home Care Workers
The current project is a safety and health intervention for home care workers conducted
within the Oregon Healthy Workforce Center (OHWC), a NIOSH Center of Excellence in Total
Worker Health.
The objective of this five-year project is to create sustainable health and safety
"communities of practice" within a population of typically isolated home care workers. The
intervention is a team-based, peer-led scripted curriculum that integrates health promotion
and protection topics, as well as proven elements of social support groups for caregivers.
The investigators hypothesize that this intervention will increase measures of experienced
community of practice, well-being, and diet, exercise, and safety behaviors, as compared to a
usual practices control condition.
Home care workers have an injury rate that is nearly four times higher than the US average
and are at elevated risk for mental and physical health problems. These low income workers,
who are predominantly female and older than 40, assist the elderly and disabled with
self-care and mobility in private homes. Although interventions developed for other caregiver
populations improve well being and knowledge, they have largely failed to address illness and
injury prevention behaviors. No prior study has addressed the lack of occupational social
support structures for home care workers. The long term goal of this project is to create a
model work structure for promoting and protecting home care worker health that can be
disseminated to other states. The objective of this study is to develop and evaluate a new
team-based intervention for self-employed home care workers enrolled in Oregon public
programs. Workers will be organized into neighborhood based Total Worker Health teams that
meet regularly for education and social support. The proposed curriculum will integrate
health promotion and protection topics, and will use established team-based education methods
as well as proven elements of social support groups for caregivers.
The primary hypotheses are that organizing home care workers into Total Worker Health teams
will increase (1) Experienced community of practice, (2) Well-being, and (3) Prevention
behaviors in the domains of diet, exercise, and safety.
The project will be conducted over five years and accomplish six specific aims. Aims 1-3 will
be assessed during years 1-3, and aims 4-6 will take place during years 4 and 5.
1. Develop and Pilot Test a Total Worker Health Team Curriculum for Home Care Workers
During the first year of the project the investigators will develop and pilot test a
Total Worker Health team curriculum with a single group of home care workers identified
as leaders by the Service Employees International Union (SEIU Local 503). Pilot test
participants will later serve as team leaders in the randomized controlled trial in Aim
2. Curriculum materials will include educational workbooks, active home work
assignments, and scripted meeting facilitation guides for team leaders. The curriculum
will be designed to establish functioning Total Worker Health teams in 6 months using a
half-day team building orientation followed by structured monthly educational and
supportive team meetings. Study methods will be evaluated and revised based on pilot
participants' feedback about the acceptability of the goals, procedures, and outcomes of
intervention activities.
2. Determine the Effectiveness of Total Worker Health Teams with a Randomized Controlled
Trial The investigators will recruit a sample home care workers from the Portland and
Eugene metro areas. This sample will then be organized into neighborhood clusters and
randomly assigned to intervention and control conditions. Evaluation measures will be
collected from all participants at pre-intervention (month 0), post-intervention (month
6), and follow-up (month 12) time points. Intervention participants will complete the
Total Worker Health curriculum while control participants receive usual treatment.
Intervention effectiveness will be established at the 6-month time point through between
group comparisons on changes in experienced community of practice, well-being, and
prevention behaviors (diet, exercise, and safety). The investigators will also measure
body composition and fitness, metabolic and heart disease biomarkers, job stress, social
support, musculoskeletal symptoms, and illness/injuries.
3. Measure the Integrity of Sustained Total Worker Health Team Meetings and Maintenance at
Follow-Up. After each Total Worker Health team completes the intervention curriculum,
they will be provided with additional meeting topics and funding to sustain regular team
meetings for an extra 6 months. The researchers will observe and monitor team meetings
during this follow-up period to measure participation level and adherence to the
prescribed team meeting structure. The integrity scores for team meetings and potential
maintenance of between group intervention effects will be evaluated at the 12-month
(follow up) time point.
4. Measure the Durability and Economic Impact of Intervention Effects and the Social
Experiences of Program Participants, Within our Original Cohort. The researchers will
conduct additional follow-up data collection with our original cohort at the 24-month
time point to assess post-intervention maintenance. The economic impact of the
intervention will be measured by computing intervention costs and contrasting them with
estimated outcome-related savings for stakeholders. A qualitative study of co-worker
social support within the intervention will also be implemented as part of Aim 4.
5. Adapt and Assess the Intervention for Statewide Dissemination. The intervention will be
adapted for use in the existing Oregon Home Care Commission (OHCC) training system. The
OHCC is the state-based employer of record for bargaining with the SEIU Local 503 and
has a strong training program that reaches approximately 60% of home care workers in the
state. The investigators will work with stakeholders to adapt the 12-month, 1 meeting
per month Total Worker Health intervention curriculum to an accelerated 3.5-month, 2
meeting per month edition. The adapted intervention will then be assessed using a
pre/post design in Oregon cities with high training attendance records using
observational and selected survey outcome measures from the original randomized trial.
Promotional products and resources will also be created in year 5 to support the
dissemination of the adapted intervention within the OHCC and beyond.
6. Develop Relationships and Preliminary Data to Guide Translation and Dissemination With
Private Agencies. The investigators will engage with private home care agencies and
conduct qualitative research with agency leaders and employees to understand their
organization, culture, and drivers related to the adoption of a Total Worker Health
program. To do this the researchers will attend quarterly meetings of the Oregon Health
Care Association, an organization which facilitates meetings with private home care
agency owners from around the state. From these meetings the investigators will recruit
a sample of agency and regional leaders to take part in survey completion and key
informant interviews. Interviews and survey data collection with home care workers
employed at several private home care agencies will also be conducted.
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