Ergonomics Clinical Trial
— SujuKEOfficial title:
SujuKE - Improving Work Flow Through Cognitive Ergonomics. An Intervention Study
Verified date | April 2020 |
Source | Finnish Institute of Occupational Health |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
The main aim of the SujuKE study is to test the effectiveness of workplace cognitive ergonomics development program designed to decrease cognitively disrupting work conditions and work-related cognitive stress, and to improve work flow. The cognitive ergonomics workplace intervention includes cognitive ergonomics workshop, work experiments, and intervention task questionnaires. Its effect on changes in subjective measures of work conditions, work flow, stress, and work productivity will be studied. The hypothesis is that cognitive ergonomics intervention decreases the level of cognitive strain related to work conditions, and this change is associated with higher level in work flow, well-being, and productivity at work.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 927 |
Est. completion date | October 31, 2019 |
Est. primary completion date | October 31, 2019 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 70 Years |
Eligibility |
The participants in the study work in the participating organizations were recruited
through direct contacts and by informing about the study in various events. Inclusion Criteria: - The participating organization offers several comparable teams (regarding type of tasks and demands) for study - The participating units (in organizations) include knowledge workers, such as office workers and experts Whose - work tasks are cognitively rather than physically demanding - work requires learning and updating knowledge and skills - information and communication technology is the main tool at work. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Finland | Finnish Institute of Occupational Health | Helsinki | Etelä-Suomi |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Finnish Institute of Occupational Health | Finnish Work Environment Fund |
Finland,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Change in cognitive strain prevalence | Cognitive strain prevalence measures prevalence of disruptions, interruptions, and information overload. There are two items on disruptions, three items on interruptions, and seven items on information overload including memory load, multitasking, and problems with instructions (Brain@Work survey by FIOH). Response scale is from 1 to 5, higher number indicating higher prevalence (Scale: More rarely; Monthly; Weekly; Daily, or almost daily; Many times a day) Total score is a factor score including all 12 items. |
1: Baseline measurements: 10-16 weeks before the intervention phase. 2: End-of-treatment measurements: 18-28 weeks after the baseline measurements. 3: Follow-up 4m: 16 weeks after the end-of-treatment. 4: Follow-up 10m: 40 weeks after end-of-treatment | |
Secondary | Change in subjective Cognitive load | Measured a) for the main themes of the intervention study. There are two items on disruptions, three items on interruptions, and seven items on information overload including memory load, multitasking, and problems with instructions (Brain@Work survey by FIOH). Furthermore, measured b) with all 39 items from FIOH Brain@Work Index questionnaire including 13 subscales. Response scale is from -3 to 3 (seven-point), negative values reflecting motivation-energization, positive values reflecting strain, zero reflecting neither. Higher number indicates higher load (Scale: Motivate-Energize Very much; Quite a lot; Somewhat; Cause strain Somewhat; Quite a lot; Very much). Total scores are averaged a) over the 12 items (disruptions, interruptions, information overload) and b) over the 39 items (all 13 subscales) weighted with their estimated prevalence (5 point scale, higher values reflecting higher prevalence). |
1: Baseline measurements: 10-16 weeks before the intervention phase. 2: End-of-treatment measurements: 18-28 weeks after the baseline measurements. 3: Follow-up 4m: 16 weeks after the end-of-treatment. 4: Follow-up 10m: 40 weeks after end-of-treatment | |
Secondary | Change in Recovery | Includes 1 item recovery measure. Measured with question: "How well do you usually feel that you recover from the strain caused by your work (both mental and physical) after your working day/work shift?". Scale from 0 (very poorly) to 10 (very well). | 1: Baseline measurements: 10-16 weeks before the intervention phase. 2: End-of-treatment measurements: 18-28 weeks after the baseline measurements. 3: Follow-up 4m: 16 weeks after the end-of-treatment. 4: Follow-up 10m: 40 weeks after end-of-treatment | |
Secondary | Change in stress | Includes 1 item stress measure. Measured with question "By stress we mean a situation in which a person feels tense, restless, nervous, or anxious, or they find it difficult to sleep because they cannot switch off their thoughts. Do you currently feel this kind of stress? (Choose the option that best suits you)". Scale from 0 (not at all) to 10 (very much). | 1: Baseline measurements: 10-16 weeks before the intervention phase. 2: End-of-treatment measurements: 18-28 weeks after the baseline measurements. 3: Follow-up 4m: 16 weeks after the end-of-treatment. 4: Follow-up 10m: 40 weeks after end-of-treatment | |
Secondary | Change in Burnout index | Burnout is measured with The Copenhagen Psychosocial Questionnaire II (COPSOQ-II) Burnout Index (Pejtersen, Kristensen, Borg, & Bjorner, 2010). The index includes four items. Scale: Not at all; A small part of the time; Part of the time; A large part of the time; All the time). Each item is scored 0-100 (0, 25, 50, 75, and 100), higher values indicating higher level of burnout. Total score is averaged over the four items. | 1: Baseline measurements: 10-16 weeks before the intervention phase. 2: End-of-treatment measurements: 18-28 weeks after the baseline measurements. 3: Follow-up 4m: 16 weeks after the end-of-treatment. 4: Follow-up 10m: 40 weeks after end-of-treatment | |
Secondary | Change in General health | Includes 1 item general health measure. Measured with question: "In general: would you say that your health is:" Scale: from 1 to 5, higher number indicating better health (Poor, Fairly poor, Average, Fairly good, Good). | 1: Baseline measurements: 10-16 weeks before the intervention phase. 2: End-of-treatment measurements: 18-28 weeks after the baseline measurements. 3: Follow-up 4m: 16 weeks after the end-of-treatment. 4: Follow-up 10m: 40 weeks after end-of-treatment | |
Secondary | Change in subjective presenteeism | Presenteeism / Subjective productivity Health at Work (HPQ) survey (World Health Organization, WHO 2001) questions B14: how would you rate your usual job performance over the past year or two? (Scale 0-10 with 10 being top performance) and B15: how would you rate your overall job performance on the days you worked during the past 4 weeks (28 days)? (Scale 0-10 with 10 being top performance) | 1: Baseline measurements: 10-16 weeks before the intervention phase. 2: End-of-treatment measurements: 18-28 weeks after the baseline measurements. 3: Follow-up 4m: 16 weeks after the end-of-treatment. 4: Follow-up 10m: 40 weeks after end-of-treatment | |
Secondary | Change in Cognitive stress symptoms | Cognitive stress symptoms are measured with COPSOPQ-II Cognitive Stress Index (Pejtersen, Kristensen, Borg, & Bjorner, 2010). The index includes four items (scale: Not at all; A small part of the time; Part of the time; A large part of the time; All the time). Each item is scored 0-100 (0, 25, 50, 75, and 100), higher values indicating higher level of stress symptoms. Total score is averaged over the four items. |
1: Baseline measurements: 10-16 weeks before the intervention phase. 2: End of treatment measures: 18-28 weeks after baseline. | |
Secondary | Change in Work flow | Work flow is measured as cognitive failure at work with three subscales. a) Workplace Cognitive Failure Scale (WCFS) memory sub-scale includes five items, b) WCFS attention sub-scale includes five items (Wallace & Chen 2005), and c) FIOH Cognitive failure: Multitasking subscale includes three items. The scale is from one to five (More rarely; Monthly; Weekly; Daily, or almost daily; Many times a day), higher number indicating higher prevalence of cognitive failure and lower work flow. Total scores are averaged for each subscale: WCFS memory, WCFS attention, and FIOH multitasking. |
1: Baseline measurements: 10-16 weeks before the intervention phase. 2: End of treatment measures: 18-28 weeks after baseline. . |
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