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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2012 Dec 1.
Published in final edited form as: Am J Public Health. 2011 Jul 21;101(Suppl 1):S196–S207. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2010.300075

Preventing Chronic Disease At the Workplace: A Workshop Report and Recommendations

Glorian Sorensen 1, Paul Landsbergis 2, Leslie Hammer 3, Benjamin Amick 4, Laura Linnan 5, Antronette Yancey 6, Laura S Welch 7, Ron Z Goetzel 8, Kelly M Flannery 9, Charlotte Pratt 10; the Workshop Working Group on Worksite Chronic Disease Prevention
PMCID: PMC3222510  NIHMSID: NIHMS353007  PMID: 21778485

Abstract

Chronic diseases are the leading cause of death in the United States. Worksites provide a venue to address risk factors and conditions at work through health promotion aimed at improving individual health behaviors, health protection including occupational safety and health interventions, and efforts to support the interface between work and family. In response to the importance of preventing chronic disease at worksites, the National Institutes of Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention convened a workshop to identify research priorities to advance knowledge and implementation of effective strategies to reduce chronic disease risk. Workshop participants outlined a conceptual framework and corresponding research agenda to address chronic disease prevention through integrating health promotion and health protection in the workplace.

INTRODUCTION

Approximately half of Americans live with a chronic disease and about one-fourth report residual effects from their chronic diseases.1 Chronic diseases, including heart disease, cancer and stroke, are the leading causes of death in the United States (US).2 Disparities in chronic disease exist by race/ethnicity and socioeconomic status, with minorities and lower income groups having a higher prevalence of heart disease, cancer and stroke, and multiple risk factors for these conditions.35 Of additional concern, the prevalence of chronic diseases is higher in the US than in other developed countries.68 There are more than 81 million people with cardiovascular disease (CVD) in the US, with an estimated cost of $503 billion in 2010.9 In 2005, over 1.3 million people were diagnosed with cancer, with costs in 2007 estimated at $219 billion.10 Almost 24 million Americans have diabetes, at a cost of $174 billion in 2007.11 Approximately 67% of American adults are overweight or obese,12 with a projected cost of $147 billion for 2008.13 In addition, non-fatal chronic conditions, such as musculoskeletal disorders 14 and psychological disorders,15 are major sources of disability.16

Worksites provide a venue to address multiple individual risk factors and risk conditions through worksite health promotion aimed at changes in individual behaviors, worksite health protection including occupational safety and health interventions, and efforts to address unhealthy work-family conflict.17,18 As a venue for delivering chronic disease prevention efforts, worksites provide a ready channel for reaching the large segment of the population that is employed. Worksite conditions also contribute to the development of chronic diseases, for example through hazardous job exposures, high job demands, and inflexible work schedules.

Individual health behaviors contribute significantly to these chronic disease outcomes. In 2000, 435,000 deaths (18.1% of total deaths) were attributed to tobacco use, 365,000 deaths (15.2%) were attributable to a combination of poor diet and lack of physical activity, and 84,000 deaths (3.5%) were related to alcohol misuse.19,20 These four individual health behaviors collectively accounted for approximately 40% of all deaths in the United States in 2000. 21 Worksite health promotion provides an effective way to enhance health-promoting behaviors, to reach a large segment of the population, and to reduce chronic disease risk factors. Comprehensive worksite health promotion has been recommended by the American Heart Association, the American Cancer Society, Healthy People 2010, the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, the National Institutes of Health, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).2225

In 2006, US healthcare spending was reported to be over 2 trillion dollars26 and employers on average paid more than one-third of this cost.27 A meta-analysis of the literature on costs and savings associated with worksite health promotion programs reported that medical cost reductions of about $3.27 are observed for every dollar invested in these programs.28 This number has been corroborated by recent systematic reviews and economic analysis conducted by the Task Force on Community Preventive Services, which reported an annual savings of $3.20 for every dollar invested.29,30 Other benefits of worksite health promotion include reduced absenteeism28,30 and improved employee attitudes towards work.31

The work environment, encompassing the physical, psychosocial, and organizational environments, directly shapes employee health, safety, and health behaviors.22 In 2008, over 5,000 workers died from occupational injuries,32 and work-related illnesses account for 49,000 deaths annually.33 Over 4.6 million workers experienced non-fatal occupational injuries or illnesses in 2008; about half of these non-fatal injuries and illnesses resulted in time away from work due to recuperation, job transfer or job restriction.34 Employers and insurers spent approximately $85 million in workers’ compensation costs in 2007,35 although this figure is only a portion of the costs borne by employers, workers, and society overall for the costs associated with work-related illness and injury. In 1992, the total economic costs to the nation from occupational illnesses and acute injuries was estimated to total between $15536 and $171 billion, 37 figures that are similar to those for all cancer or all cardiovascular disease in this time period.36,38

Worksite health protection initiatives include efforts to improve occupational safety and health, address organizational factors at work that influence worker health, and support work-life balance. Compliance with safety and health standards were mandated by the passage of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970. OSHA rules, such as those pertaining to cotton dust, inorganic lead, and blood-borne pathogens, have resulted in reduced exposures and illnesses.39 Efforts by government, labor, management and health professionals have also led to reductions in exposure to biomechanical risk factors at work, which contribute to work-related musculoskeletal disorders, the most common category of occupational disease reported to OSHA.14 Labor-management health and safety committees and worker compensation insurers have reported that OSHA’s support of prevention through regulation and training have contributed to the prevention of work-related injuries and illnesses.40 It is also possible for worksite initiatives to redress sources of stress at work including inflexible work schedules, low job control, and excessive job demands, 41,42 which lead to negative health outcomes for employees and their families.

The combination of health behavior change programs with work environment changes may be synergistic and when integrated, may enhance their effectiveness.22,43 Beyond using the worksite as a platform to promote changes in individual health behaviors, such as smoking, dietary intake, physical activity, and weight control, a more integrated approach recognizes that the workplace acts as both an accelerator and preventer of chronic disease and as a key determinant of individual health behaviors, through physical, social, organizational and psychosocial mechanisms. Simply stated, workers may perceive changes in their individual health behaviors as futile in the face of significant occupational exposures that have considerable bearing on their health. Conversely, management and labor efforts to create a healthy work environment may contribute to workers’ motivations to modify their personal health behaviors, and may foster a climate of trust that may support workers’ receptivity to messages from their employer regarding individual health behavior change.4446 This principle of integrating worksite health protection with worksite health promotion was recently endorsed by the American Heart Association for cardiovascular health promotion.47

In light of the importance of chronic disease prevention at the workplace, the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the National Institute for Child Health and Human Development (NICHD), and the National Cancer Institute (NCI), convened a workshop to identify research needed to develop effective programs that reduce chronic disease risk and support worker and family health through effectively promoting healthy and safe individual behaviors, reducing physical, psychosocial and organizational risks at the worksite, and promoting work-life balance. The workshop, held on May 21–22, 2009, was co-chaired by Dr. Barbara Israel, Professor of Health Behavior and Health Education, School of Public Health, University of Michigan, and Dr. Glorian Sorensen, Professor of Society, Human Development and Health, Harvard School of Public Health. The panel, selected by the workshop sponsors to reflect a range of perspectives on chronic disease prevention in the workplace, consisted of specialists in epidemiology, sociology, occupational and preventive medicine, organizational psychology, occupational health psychology, health education and health behavior, environmental and occupational health, economics, exercise physiology, ergonomics, pediatrics and human development. Their interests were varied and included individual behavior and organizational change research, family and community health research, public policy, intervention design and evaluation, translation and outcomes research, participatory action research, and health disparities (see list of participants in Appendix A).

The workshop objective was to develop a comprehensive and coordinated research plan to build the evidence base around effective chronic disease prevention for working adults and their families through worksite interventions. To achieve this objective, the workshop had three main informational sessions: 1) promoting individual behavior change, 2) changing the work environment (physical, psycho-social and organizational), and 3) intervening to influence the work-family-community interface. Each session was guided by eight areas of discussion: 1) research strategy, 2) current state of the science, 3) conceptual models, 4) research design, 5) practices and policies, 6) cost-effectiveness, 7) barriers, and 8) specific populations. This report presents three parallel worksite approaches to preventing chronic disease – through promoting individual behavior change, changing the work environment, and addressing work-family-community interface – and explores opportunities for coordination and integration of these approaches. Further details about these recommendations are presented in Table 1.

TABLE 1.

RECOMMENDATIONS FOR FUTURE RESEARCH

Assessment of intervention efficacy and characteristics associated with efficacy
  • Assess the efficacy of interventions coordinating and integrating efforts to promote individual behavior change, improve the work environment, and address work-family-community interface. See Figure 1.

  • Identify opportunities for improved coordination across formal/informal worksite policies, programs and practices aimed at promoting and protecting worker health.

  • Identify factors that contribute to the adoption of integrated interventions leading to both work environment changes and individual changes, and to the participation of organizations and employees (or their representatives) regarding integrated interventions that change behaviors/policies and sustain behavioral/policy changes.

  • Assess factors associated with differential effectiveness of interventions for worksites of varying sizes, industries, and groups within worksites (management, unions, individuals, workers’ families).

  • Investigate the effectiveness of minimal intensity or “default” intervention strategies that require little up-front investment, and deliver small doses to the majority of workers with little initiative required by the individual worker, particularly in addressing health equity, e.g., for physical activity, policy changes that mandate exercise breaks or restrict nearby parking.58

  • Address a range of obstacles to participation in coordinated interventions among worksites (e.g., competing priorities, organizational commitment, corporate culture, costs, lack of staff expertise) and for individual workers (e.g., scheduling, long work hours, language, privacy concerns or job control.)

Attending to population, job, and worksite characteristics
  • Increase the generalizability of intervention research by systematically including a broad range of workers, by age, occupation, income, education, language and literacy level, gender, race, ethnicity, co-morbidities, family roles/responsibility, immigration status, urban or rural status and socio-economic position.

  • Assess intervention efficacy by job characteristics; job title; occupational status; full time, part-time or contingent status; schedule flexibility; site-based vs. off-site (e.g., construction and transportation)

  • Assess worksite intervention efficacy across a range of worksite characteristics, including by industry, size, turnover rates, unionization status, rural versus urban location, public/private sector, and other key factors.

  • Assess the interplay of organizational policies (formal/informal) and practices related to health promotion and health protection, roles of management structure and collective bargaining, leadership style (e.g., transactional, transformational), and management practices in supporting or inhibiting health program effectiveness, sustainability and worker engagement.

  • Assess factors associated with employers’ decisions in purchasing programs, including economic outcomes that may elucidate the business case for worksite health programs.

Use of appropriate study designs and methods
  • Select methodologically rigorous and theory-based research designs appropriate to the research question and setting, including cluster randomized controlled trials, observational studies, panel/cohort studies, time series analyses, monitoring/surveillance studies, natural experiments and qualitative studies.

  • Assess multi-level interventions, e.g., individual, interpersonal, family, workplace policies and state and national policies (e.g., legislative, regulatory) using appropriate statistical techniques accounting for intra-class correlation and clustered data.

  • Develop a registry of worksite health promotion/health protection efforts that would provide a means of tracking existing worksite health efforts over time.

  • Use participatory research approaches that seek involvement of individuals and groups likely to be affected by worksite interventions, both work site-based (e.g., employees, senior/middle management, employee health services, human resources, benefit plan, employee assistance, absence/disability management, medical, organization development, and labor unions) and community- based (e.g., families, worker advocacy groups, committees on occupational safety and health and occupational medicine clinics).

  • Stimulate the use of mixed methods (quantitative and qualitative methods combined) and comparative case studies to gain access to in-depth descriptions of processes in the context of real-world environments that can aid in the identification of best practices and provide examples of practice-based evidence of successful programs.

Application of appropriate and expanded measures and metrics
  • Measure multiple exposures, processes and outcomes, including morbidity, mortality, risk factors, health behaviors, incidence, presenteeism, absenteeism, work ability index, biological markers, quality adjusted life years (QALYs), organizational culture, economic measures (including return of investment, productivity and related indicators), sustainability, process measures, work-family spillover and cross over effects.

  • Develop parsimonious measures, such as health risk appraisal tools that incorporate health behaviors, occupational hazards, and work-family balance.

  • Assess the wide range of hazardous occupational exposures, including toxic substances; long work hours, shiftwork, harassment and other work stressors; organizational restructuring or downsizing; lean production; temporary or contract work; and telecommuting and home work.129

  • Examine potential mediators and moderators of intervention effectiveness, change, cost variables (cost effectiveness, cost benefit and return on investment). Assess factors that document the mechanisms of change, e.g., intervention reach, levels of employee participation, dose delivered, dose received, fidelity to intervention objectives, implementation, and intervention exportability.72 RE-AIM (reach, efficacy, adoption, implementation and maintenance)161 and the 4 S’s of program design (size, scope, scalability and sustainability)148

Studying sustainability and knowledge transfer
  • Study the process of adaptation of evidence-based interventions for use with employees and special subgroups of workers at disproportionate risk of chronic disease (e.g. adapt for low wage workers, literacy and ESL concerns, shift workers, etc.)

  • Assess program adoption and implementation of packaged evidence-based worksite health promotion/health protection interventions.

  • Conduct research on the process of knowledge transfer to identify factors that promote or inhibit program adoption, implementation and maintenance within a range of worksite settings, including employee and management involvement.

Addressing global concerns
  • Assess the impact of competition in the global economy and policies related to globalization (e.g., deregulation, privatization) on working conditions, work-life balance and health.

  • Identify ways to promote better work environments and employee health for employees of multinational corporations outside the U.S.

  • Measure and redress health disparities in the U.S. and in a global context.

CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK

Figure 1 depicts the conceptual framework that guided the workshop discussions. The three circles illustrate the three intervention targets that were the workshop focus: individual health behaviors, the work environment, and impacts on the work, family and community interface. A focus on individual health behaviors, such as smoking, dietary patterns, physical activity, and weight control, may occur singly or as a multiple risk factor approach, and typically utilizes the workplace as a platform for program delivery; changes in the work environment may be implemented to support health behavior changes. Components of the work environment that may influence worker and family health include worksite culture; organizational policies and practices; hazardous chemical, physical and biological exposures; psychological job demands; job control; work schedule and control over work time; work-related rewards; organizational justice; work norms and social support; and union status. Additional attention must be paid to the impact of the interrelated work, family and broader community systems, given the importance of psychological and behavioral spillover and crossover between work and family lives. The conceptual model also acknowledges the roles of economic, legal, political and social factors, which may influence worker health, job insecurity, access to health insurance, and worker and family stress.18 Overlap of the circles shows opportunities for collaboration, integration, and synergy, thereby strengthening the potential for impact on chronic disease prevention at the workplace.

FIGURE 1.

FIGURE 1

WORKSHOP CONCEPTUAL MODEL.

PROMOTING INDIVIDUAL HEALTH BEHAVIOR CHANGE AT THE WORKPLACE

Workshop participants referred to the Healthy People 2010 Objectives for a definition of “comprehensive” worksite health promotion, which includes several core components: health education programs, a supportive social and physical environment, “integrated” programs (e.g., budget, staffing, resources), screening (including treatment and follow up as needed), and linkage to other assistance programs.25 Worksite health promotion programs also include a needs assessment, individualized health messages, encouragement of self-care, use of incentives, social support, and sufficient duration to enhance implementation and maintenance.48 Through Healthy People 2010, CDC has recommended that at least 75% of worksites offer a comprehensive worksite health promotion program.49 The most recent National Worksite Health Promotion Survey found, however, that only 7% of worksites do so.50 Although larger worksites are less numerous that smaller ones,51 worksites with 750 or more employees were over six times as likely to offer comprehensive worksite programs than those with 50–99 employees.50 Larger worksites also offered more variety in programs such as physical activity, tobacco, fitness and nutrition, and screening services, compared to smaller worksites.50

Barriers to worksite program implementation include low employee participation, lack of employee interest, limited staff resources, cost, misalignment of incentives among different stakeholders, and insufficient management support. 50,52 Workshop participants discussed strategies for increasing employee participation, including peer and management support and incentives, as well as implementing and maintaining a respectful partnership with stakeholders (e.g., employees and their families, labor, management, health professionals, insurance companies, government agencies).

Physical activity provided a useful example of a health behavior that can be effectively influenced through multi-level worksite health promotion. Only about 32% of U.S. adults report engaging in regular leisure-time physical activity, with rates even lower among ethnic minority, low income and other underserved populations;53 rates are also lower when activity is objectively monitored.54 Several studies have demonstrated the potential impact of brief, socially obligatory structured group exercise breaks on paid time.5558 Future studies may explore the use of physical activity breaks in increasing participation in physical activity and enhancing sustainability, as well as identifying the organizational benefits of exercise for injury prevention.5963

Participants discussed the challenge of sustaining health promotion programs after implementation, and of the tendency of some programs to degrade from evidence-based models over time. A framework for implementing, sustaining, and evaluating effective programs, such as the RE-AIM model, can be a helpful guide for program planning and evaluation. The RE-AIM framework addresses both employee and organizational interventions by considering the reach and representativeness, as well as efficacy, adoption, implementation and maintenance of comprehensive worksite health promotion programs.64,65

Research gaps and future directions

Workshop participants discussed the need for ongoing research to identify characteristics of successful programs, including through the use of in-depth, mixed methods, and comparative case studies.66 For example, it will be useful to examine the extent to which worksite health promotion efforts may contribute simultaneously or sequentially to multiple health behavior changes, and the extent to which one health behavior change may serve as a “gateway” to other health behavior changes, e.g., increases in physical activity may spark and support changes in dietary patterns. Future research may also test intervention methods for high-risk employees (e.g., overweight or obese employees) via stepped-care approaches or other methods tailored to diverse populations based on race/ethnicity, age, health status, and other key characteristics. Process evaluation methods may be employed to examine program impacts on sub-populations when studies have adequate power for key subgroup analyses. Formative research is needed to understand factors associated with low participation rates among both employees and employers,67 and the role of key social influences on employee participation, such as from family members, management and supervisors, and union representatives. Specifc research is also needed for small businesses.68

Workshop participants stressed the need to identify the level and intensity of intervention exposure needed for optimal efficacy, and to differentiate which intervention components contribute the most to behavior changes. This information is important as well to determine the favorable cost benefit ratios and returns on investment (ROI).6971 The economic rationale behind health promotion interventions is particularly important because of the need to convince program sponsors to initiate and maintain such programs.72 Future research should consider, for example, the relevance of health promotion programs to employers with fully insured health plans vs. self-insured plans, and the role of behavioral economics in chronic disease prevention.7375

PROMOTING CHANGES IN THE WORK ENVIRONMENT: PHYSICAL, ORGANIZATIONAL AND PSYCHOSOCIAL CHANGES

The physical, psychosocial, and organizational work environments are important contributors to chronic disease. Cancer is the leading cause of workplace fatalities worldwide, accounting for about one-third of all workplace fatalities.76 The World Health Organization and others have estimated that 8–16% of all cancers are caused by preventable exposures to workplace hazards.76,77 Shift work may also lead to increased cancer risk.78 Workplace risk factors for cardiovascular disease include chemicals such as carbon monoxide, carbon disulfide, solvents, and lead; organizational factors such as work schedules, including long work hours and shift work; and psychosocial stressors, such as high demand-low control work (job strain), high job efforts combined with low job rewards (e.g., income, support, respect and job security), and organizational injustice.15,79 Estimates of the proportion of CVD due to these work-related factors range from 15% 80 to 35%.81 Work schedule factors and psychosocial stressors contribute to obesity, smoking, heavy alcohol use, and lack of exercise;8284 as well as to musculoskeletal disorders;85 psychological disorders, such as depression, anxiety and “burnout”,15 and work-family stress and conflict.86,87 Workplace risk factors for musculoskeletal disorders include repetition, force, awkward postures, vibration and temperature. Each year, these disorders affect about 1 million workers and cost the nation between $45 billion and $54 billion in compensation expenditures, lost wages, and decreased productivity.14

Risks posed by the work environment do not affect all workers equally. Workshop participants discussed older workers, noting there has been over a 100% increase in the number of workers aged 65 or older between 1997 and 2007, compared to a 59% increase in total employment during that decade.88 Chronic disease is more prevalent in older than younger workers. Research using the work-ability index (WAI),89,90 which captures workers’ assessment of their individual ability to be productive in the job given their current health status, has shown older workers consistently score lower on work-ability compared to younger workers. Although average WAI decreases with age, factors such as improvements in ergonomics, reductions in work stress and work demands, improved supervisor support, flexible work schedules, teamwork, individual lifestyle health promotion (e.g., physical activity), and building workers’ skills and competencies can improve the WAI. 91 Both chronic musculoskeletal disease and low work-ability are highly predictive of disability. 9294 Participants discussed the utility of the concept of work-ability and other measures to capture an important interplay between health status and efforts to change health and work. Workplace interventions that integrate improved workplace safety and health conditions with personal health promotion or individual interventions may be effective in preserving work-ability, reducing disability and preventing or helping people to manage chronic illnesses as they age.56,95

Risks posed by the work environment also vary by employee socio-economic position, as illustrated by the differential impacts of work stressors, and their relationship to health behaviors and chronic diseases.96 Work stressors associated with chronic disease include work organizational practices and characteristics (e.g., downsizing, restructuring, privatization of public services); production characteristics (e.g., piece-rate incentive pay systems, electronic surveillance, inadequate staffing); task-level psychosocial stressors (e.g., job strain, low job control, long hours, shift work); and other work-related factors (e.g., organizational injustice, job insecurity, safety and health hazards).97,98 Workshop participants noted evidence that socioeconomic position and work stressors interact. For example, blue-collar workers experiencing job strain are more likely than white collar workers with job strain to have heart attacks (among Swedish men),99 and elevated blood pressure (among New York City men).100 The workgroup discussed the growing socioeconomic disparities in cardiovascular disease101 and its risk factors, with risk increasing for lower status (blue collar) workers relative to higher status (white collar) workers.102 Relative to other workers, workers from lower socioeconomic status also face more hazardous physical and psychosocial workplace exposures, and have less access to health promotion programs at work.103 Participants suggested that labor market trends and related changes in working conditions of lower income workers may contribute to chronic disease disparities. These trends include stagnant real income and growing income inequality, the decreasing proportion of the U.S. labor force in unions, increases in precarious or contingent work, deregulation, and privatization of government services.15,97

Research gaps and future directions

Further research is needed to examine the efficacy of interventions promoting changes in the work environment, with attention to modifying factors such as type of job, job status, employment contract, industry and unionization status. This research should examine the range of mechanisms (e.g., toxicity, psychological stress mechanisms, and biomechanical stress) by which hazardous occupational exposures increase the risk of chronic disease. There is also a need for improved understanding of strategies to promote healthy aging at work, and of work environment factors related to competition in the global economy that may explain growing socioeconomic disparities in chronic disease and related risk factors.

Tools for assessing worksite support for workers’ health behaviors (e.g., HeartCheck104) as well as Health Risk Appraisals, need to be expanded to include hazardous occupational exposures. Since worker compensation systems capture only a small fraction of work-related chronic diseases, novel methods, such as access to medical insurance claim databases linked to employment data, are also needed to understand the work-relatedness of chronic disease and its various mechanisms.

Whereas these areas for further research are important, the integration of research methods into practice and operations can provide significant insight into how to implement solutions that work.105 The applicability and acceptability of checklists, measurement tools, and surveys will vary by industry and sector, as well as with the resources the workplace has to redress problems. It is important to consider the applicability of research to practice in examining use of measurement and evaluation tools that may also serve as interventions.

Research is needed on the impact of legislative and regulatory policy changes at state and national levels on exposures in the work environment, worker health behaviors and chronic disease risk. For example, it will be important to track the potential impact of health care reform, changes in federal or state laws on minimum staffing levels among nurses, investments in ventilation systems to control chemical exposures, and state or municipal paid family leave or paid sick leave legislation.106 Research should address the organizational and economic factors that predict how fully workplaces implement these policy changes.107

WORKPLACE INTERVENTIONS AND THE WORK-FAMILY-COMMUNITY INTERFACE

Work also influences health through its interface with workers’ families and their communities. Workshop participants discussed the changing nature of work-family dynamics, the resulting impact of workers’ exposures to stressors at home and on the job, the potential effects not only for workers’ health but also for the health of their families, and the implications for workplace interventions to help reduce work-family stress.

Attention to the work-family interface has increased over the past 30 years with increasing numbers of women working outside of the home, a corresponding increase in dual earner families, delays in childbirth, and an increasing percentage of workers who are caring for both children and aging parents.108 These socio-demographic changes reduce family time, and contribute to work-family stress and broader changes in family members’ roles.109,110 With increases in service sector employment coupled with increases in technology and the global economy, workers are being required to operate in a 24/7 work environment. Many workers occupy low wage, high demand service jobs, requiring them to have second jobs to make ends meet. Work-family conflict, or the stress and interference of engaging in both work and family roles simultaneously, has been linked to mental health problems such as depressive symptoms and psychological distress, lower self-reported health,111116 more chronic physical symptoms, and higher sickness absence.117,118 Work-family conflict has also been related to higher work stress, family stress, and substance abuse,86,87,119 as well as to decreased healthy eating behaviors.120 Work-family conflict may also result in decreased organizational commitment and job satisfaction, absenteeism, and increased intentions to leave the job.86

While workers’ families and communities clearly may support workers through mechanisms such as positive spillover and social support,121 much research in the area of work and family has identified the detrimental effects of integrating multiple roles on worker and family health.86 These detrimental effects have primarily been examined among white-collar workers with greater access to flexible work schedules and control over work hours. Workshop participants speculated that the impact of work-family conflicts and stress may be more pronounced for lower wage workers due to the lack of workplace support and higher levels of psychosocial stressors such as demanding supervisors, excessive work hours, and unpredictable work schedules.

Formal workplace supports, benefits, and policies that are aimed at reducing such work-family conflict include providing dependent care support via subsidies, resources and referral, alternative work schedules, and increased worker control over when, where and how work is performed. Informal support comes from organizational and management culture. Research has demonstrated that the success of formal supports in impacting worker and family health and well-being is dependent on the level of organizational and managerial informal support for work and family.122 Furthermore, a recent quasi-experimental study of grocery workers and their supervisors found beneficial effects of a supervisory training and a self-monitoring intervention to improve supervisor support for work and family on worker job satisfaction, turnover intentions and self-reported physical health symptoms.123

While there is substantial research indicating that the psychosocial characteristics of the work environment, such as supervisor support, work role demands, and control over work-time, spill over to impact health of workers, there is also evidence that the work environment can impact workers’ family members. This crossover, or the transmission of stress and strain from one individual to another, occurs between workers and their family members.41,42 When considering chronic disease prevention in the workplace, workshop participants recommended a systems perspective to study the effects of workplace prevention programs on the family in addition to the effect on workers, and evaluating the impact of family characteristics on how workers respond to such interventions at work.108 Workplace interventions addressing workers, their family members, and the community are needed to prevent or diminish adverse work-family conflict and crossover effects.

Research gaps and future directions

Much of what is known about workplace supports, benefits, and policies aimed at reducing work-family conflict is based on anecdotal or cross-sectional evidence. The lack of longitudinal research, experimental and quasi-experimental designs, and non-representative samples has limited the ability to draw conclusions about the effectiveness of work-family-specific policies or initiatives.124 Furthermore, participants discussed the impact of formal and informal work-family supports on workers’ ability to integrate work and family. Research on factors that contribute to the adoption, implementation, and utilization of formal work-family policies is needed. Understanding the impact of working conditions such as type of work schedule, high demands, and low control work on working families and their multiple work and family demands would be beneficial. A better understanding of the relationships between community supports and work-family conflicts is needed (e.g., the impact of programs such as Head Start on work-family stress among low-wage families, and the effects of utilization of paid FMLA on workers’ health outcomes). Formal workplace and federal policies that impact workers and their ability to manage work and family should be examined in light of their ultimate impacts on worker and family health.

It is also important to increase understanding of the informal workplace culture, its impact on supporting or hindering worker health and well-being, and ways to intervene to support its positive effects. Factors that contribute to such informal support such as workplace characteristics, individual characteristics, as well as the broader economic, legal, political, and social environments are important to pursue in future research agendas.

Currently, work-family policies and benefits are unequally distributed, with those workplaces with more professional workers being more likely to provide these supports. There is also often unequal access within a workplace, with those in higher-status occupations more likely than other workers to have flexible schedules and eligibility for benefits.125127 Future research should address whether broadening access to these work-family supports improves the health and well-being of lower-status, lower wage, and older workers and their families, and whether new interventions are needed to address the needs of these workers.

FINDING SYNERGY ACROSS DISCIPLINARY PERSPECTIVES

This workshop explored not only the parallel paths of these three approaches to worker health, but also the potential avenues for synergy, coordination, and integration as a means of strengthening chronic disease prevention efforts at the workplace, increasingly supported by of scientific evidence.22,4346,128 This approach aims to attend to individual health behaviors and to the work organization and environment, including hazardous exposures, work stressors, and organizational policies and practices, as well as work-family demands.18,129 Research has demonstrated that blue-collar workers are more likely to make health behavior changes, such as quitting smoking, when worksite health promotion programs are coupled with workplace hazard assessments and changes in the work environment.128,130,131 Research is also exploring the links between the physical and psychosocial conditions of work, and a range of musculoskeletal, cardiovascular and mental health outcomes.43,132

National initiatives are now underway to further research in this area. The NIOSH WorkLife Initiative is a broad-based effort aimed at sustaining and improving worker health through worksite programs, policies and practices that promote and protect worker health at the organizational and individual levels.133 NIOSH has identified core “essential elements” of effective workplace programs and policies for improving worker health and wellbeing, as described on the weblink.134 The Work, Family, and Health Network, funded jointly by the Centers for Disease Control and the National Institutes of Health, is another example of a worker health research initiative; the Network is aiming to develop and evaluate the effects of worksite work-family policies and practices that impact health of workers and their families.135

Workshop participants discussed challenges to the development of a shared research agenda aimed at reducing risk of chronic disease among workers and their families. Convening multi-disciplinary teams as a foundation for a trans-disciplinary approach requires surmounting barriers among scientific disciplines, including developing pooled bodies of knowledge based on shared language and jointly developed methods.136,137 These diverse disciplinary perspectives rely on communications through different journals and professional meetings, and on funding mechanisms that cut across NIH Institutes and the CDC. Our diverse backgrounds have contributed to differing perspectives about worker health. For example, the premise that worker health begins with individual behavior change sets in motion a different set of intervention strategies from the legal formulation in the Occupational Safety and Health Act, which starts from the assumption that management bears primary responsibility for worker health and safety on the job. Overcoming the segmentation of these fields ultimately will require an inclusive, comprehensive model of work and health, providing for an understanding of our differences in assumptions, vocabulary, research methods, and intervention approaches. It is possible to expand communication to support inter-disciplinary strategies, for example, through shared journals, shared symposiums, or shared funding opportunities.22,126

WORKSHOP RECOMMENDATIONS FOR FUTURE RESEARCH

Based on the presentations from the three panels, the workshop participants outlined a framework for a research agenda addressing chronic disease prevention that integrates health promotion and heath protection approaches in the workplace, and that takes into consideration the broader work-family-community interface. Workshop participants identified cross-cutting research themes and priorities for future research, with particular attention to research priorities for coordinating and integrating the three parallel targets influencing worker health. After the workshop, participants further developed these themes in a series of conference calls; the writing team consolidated these priorities, which were then vetted by the full group of participants.

As illustrated in Table 1, we identified six broad recommendations for future research:

Assessment of intervention efficacy and characteristics associated with efficacy:48,138140

As the summary of the three panel discussions illustrates, most worksite research conducted to date has focused independently on one of these three avenues of inquiry. Workshop participants placed a high priority on future research aimed at bridging the divide across the three domains, as illustrated in the conceptual model (Figure 1). It will be important to test the effects of integration across these three intervention targets on worker and family health outcomes, as well as on changes in the work environment. Interventions were defined broadly across multiple levels, including changes in the work environment and policy changes, as well as educational programs for workers and managers. Research is needed to identify opportunities for synergy across the three intervention targets, and to assess contributors to both program adoption and implementation of best practices. For example, interventions may be informed by research that explores the substantial source of stress for workers working and living with musculoskeletal pain, which can inhibit leisure-time exercise, and lead to self-medication (e.g., unhealthy food, drugs, alcohol) for the pain, and contribute to depression.141

It will be important as well to study factors related to both the adoption of integrated interventions leading to both organizational changes and individual changes, and to the participation of organizations, employee representatives and individuals in integrated interventions that change behaviors and sustain behavior changes. Similarly, research needs to examine the impact of formal organizational policies and practices related to health promotion and health protection, management structure, leadership style (e.g., transactional, transformational), and informal management practices in supporting or inhibiting health programs.105,142

Attending to population, job, and worksite characteristics:50,67,98,100,131,143147

A key theme across the three panel presentations was the persistence of disparities in worker health outcomes, access to worksite programs, and exposures in the work environment. Research is needed to identify ways to redress these disparities and assure broad-based access to interventions across groups of workers, whether defined by occupation, gender, age, socioeconomic position, race/ethnicity or other characteristics. Alternative strategies to provide integrated interventions to blue-collar and other lower status workers, such as through occupational medicine clinics or through collectively bargained programs, need to be explored. Such research must include a broad range of workers and worksites to assure the generalizability of the research findings and to identify factors to improve targeting of interventions to specific groups of workers and worksites.

Use of appropriate study designs and methods:22,143,148150

Consideration must be given to the selection of research designs appropriate to the nature of the research question and the phase of research, including not only randomized controlled trials but also natural experiments and in-depth, mixed methods, or comparative case studies. These methods must take into account the multi-level nature of this research, requiring multi-level designs that include assessments of management structures, support for workers and their families, and related organizational health outcomes. Workshop participants also recommended the use of participatory approaches that engage a diverse representation of employees in the planning and implementation of these efforts.

Application of appropriate and expanded measures and metrics:30,148,151,152

To permit comparisons across studies, researchers need to employ standardized measures that have demonstrated reliability and validity. There is a need for improved occupational exposure assessments for integrated work environment and health promotion interventions, and to assess the role of unions in worksite chronic disease prevention efforts. From an economic perspective, it will be important to develop standard methods for measuring cost savings and ROI evaluation methods, and creating standards for ROI calculation (e.g., defining the elements that comprise both the cost and benefit sides of the equation).6971,153,154 Workshop participants also discussed the need to monitor the application of integrated worksite programs, including through an integrated national worksite survey of employers to assess both program adoption and implementation.

Studying sustainability and knowledge transfer:155158

Also important is the need to identify methods to promote the use of evidence-based interventions and assess their long-term sustainability. Participants stressed the need to minimize the time for transition from research into practice,159 and to assure that evidence-based interventions are effectively adapted and disseminated. Research on the dissemination process may identify methods to engage different types of worksites and organizational leaders, examine the motivational influence of financial and other incentives for worksite participation in chronic disease prevention, investigate the influence of family members on motivation to participate, and assess barriers to effective intervention delivery.

Addressing global concerns:160

Workshop participants additionally noted that worksites exist in a global economy, and that attention needs to be paid to the promoting worker health and healthy work environments beyond the US borders.

Implementation of these recommendations

As noted above, advancing this research agenda requires the creation and nurturing of trans-disciplinary teams and identifying funding sources to support integrated studies. Research networks, centers of excellence, and other collaborative vehicles can promote research across disciplines and with diverse perspectives. Sustained funding of longitudinal research studies is needed to evaluate the effectiveness of interventions that integrate health protection and health promotion strategies. Implementation of these research recommendations will require collaboration across funding bodies. It is imperative that new funding initiatives cut across NIH Institutes and the CDC, in order to foster research on multi-level interventions addressing the three intervention targets discussed here. There is an additional need to develop relationships with journals to promote and support the dissemination of such research, for example through special issues focused on the research priorities described here. This research will also benefit from fostering graduate level training programs that promote comprehensive and integrative approaches to health promotion and health protection, as recommended here.

CONCLUSION

Prevention of chronic disease among workers requires a partnership among federal and state public policy makers, employers, workers, labor union representatives, health professionals and the surrounding community. In the face of an increasing chronic disease burden, rising health care costs and health care reform, it is critically important that part of the solution involves addressing the health of workers. Promising evidence points to the important role that the workplace may play in chronic disease prevention and control. It is important that these prevention efforts also acknowledge the potential impacts of work-related factors on individual health behaviors through physical, social, organizational and psychosocial mechanisms, and potential exposures to hazards on the job that may directly influence work, family and organizational health outcomes. It is critical that rigorous scientific evidence be the cornerstone of the next generation of research on chronic disease prevention in the workplace. Articulation of a research agenda to enhance worker health in the context of healthy workplaces will require the engagement of policy, research and funding organizations. This research will benefit from the contributions of scientists across disciplinary boundaries, including researchers focused on health behaviors and worksite health promotion, occupational safety and health, the work-family-community interface, and the intersections between work and other sectors of workers’ lives. This workshop stimulated a dialogue across these disciplines and identified critical research that may ultimately promote and protect worker health. Systematic implementation of this research vision and effective dissemination of new models of interventions to support worker health outcomes is needed to address chronic disease prevention.

Acknowledgments

This paper is based on findings and recommendations from a national workshop sponsored by the National Heart Lung and Blood Institute, the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health, the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, the National Cancer Institute, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, May 21–22, 2009, Bethesda, MD. The authors thank the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the National Institute for Child Health and Human Development, and the National Cancer Institute for their support. Dr. Sorensen’s contributions were funded by grants from the National Cancer Institute (5 K05 CA108663-05) and the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (5U19 OH008861-04).

APPENDIX A: ROSTER OF WORKSHOP PARTICIPANTS AND THEIR AFFILIATIONS

Audie A. Atienza, Ph.D. (Program Director, National Cancer Institute, NIH, Bethesda, MD)

Ben Amick, Ph.D. (Professor of Behavioral Sciences and Epidemiology, School of Public Health, The University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston, Texas and Scientific Director, Institute for Work & Health, Toronto, Canada)

Cathy L. Backinger, Ph.D, M.P.H. (Chief, Tobacco Control Research Branch, Behavioral Research Program,NCI, Rockville, MD)

Lisa Berkman, Ph.D. (Director, Center for Population and Dev Studies, Thomas D. Cabot Professor of Public Policy and of Epidemiology Harvard School of Public Health, Cambridge, MA)

Rosalind Berkowitz King, Ph.D. (Health Scientist Administrator, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Bethesda, MD)

Martin Cherniack, M.D., M.P.H. (Professor of Medicine, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, CT)

Kathy Christensen (Director, Workplace, Work Force & Working Families Program Alfred P. Sloan)

Michael Donovan, Ph.D. (Presidential Management Fellow, NHLBI, Bethesda, MD)

Lawrence Fine, M.D., M.P.H., Dr.P.H. (Chief, Clinical Applications Branch, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, NIH, Bethesda, MD)

Kelly M. Flannery, R.N., M.S. (Ph.D. student, University of Maryland Baltimore, MD)

Ron Z. Goetzel, Ph.D. (Research Professor and Director, Institute for Health and Productivity Studies, Rollins School of Public Health Emory University, Vice President, Consulting and Applied Research, Thomson Reuters, Washington, DC)

Leslie Hammer, Ph.D. (Director, Occupational Health Psychology, Professor of Psychology, Portland State University, Portland, OR)

Christine Hunter, Ph.D., ABPP (LCDR USPHS, Director of Behavioral Research Division of Diabetes, Endocrinology, and Metabolic Diseases, National Institute of Diabetes & Digestive & Kidney Diseases, NIH, Bethesda, MD)

Barbara A. Israel, Dr.P.H., M.P.H. (co-chair) (Professor, Health Behavior & Health Education, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI)

Erin Kelly, Ph.D. (Associate Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN)

Supriya Lahiri, Ph.D. (Professor, Department of Economics, University of Massachusetts Lowell Lowell, MA)

Paul Landsbergis, Ph.D., M.P.H. (Associate Professor, Department of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences, State University of New York-Downstate School of Public Health, Brooklyn, NY)

Laura Linnan, ScD, CHES (Associate Professor, Department of Health Behavior and Health Education, UNC GIllings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC)

James Merchant, M.D., DrPH (Professor, Department of Occupational and Environmental Health, Iowa City, IA)

Charlotte Pratt, Ph.D., R.D. (Program Director, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, NIH, Bethesda, MD)

Nico Pronk, Ph.D., FACSM (Vice President and Health Science Officer, Senior Research Investigator, HealthPartners Research Foundation, Minneapolis, MN)

Laura Punnett, Sc.D. (Professor, Department of Work Environment, Director, Center to Promote Health in the New England Workplace (CPH-NEW), Senior Associate, Center for Women and Work (CWW) Univ. of Mass. Lowell, MA)

Teresa Schnorr, Ph.D. (Director, Division of Surveillance, Hazard Evaluations, and Field Studies, NIOSH/CDC, Cincinnati, OH)

Mark A. Schuster, M.D., Ph.D. (William Berenberg Professor of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Chief of General Pediatrics & Vice-Chair for Health Policy, Department of Medicine, Children’s Hospital Boston, Boston, MA)

Michael Silverstein, M.D., MPH (Clinical Professor, Environmental & Occupational Health Sciences, Univ. Of Washington School of Public Health, Seattle, WA)

Glorian Sorensen, Ph.D., MPH (co-chair) (Dana-Farber Cancer Institute & Harvard School of Public Health, Professor of Society, Human Development and Health, Department of Society, Human Development, and Health; and Director of the Center for Community-Based Research, Dana Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, Massachusetts)

Thomas M. Vogt, M.D., MPH (Senior Investigator, Kaiser Permanente, Honolulu, HI)

Gregory R. Wagner, M.D. (Harvard School of Public Health Boston, MA and National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Washington, DC)

Laura S. Welch, M.D. (Medical Director, CPWR - The Center for Construction Research and Training Silver Spring MD)

Antronette Yancey, M.D., MPH (Professor, Health Services, UCLA School of Public Health, Los Angeles, CA)

Footnotes

Based on findings and recommendations from a national workshop sponsored by the National Heart Lung and Blood Institute, the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health, the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, the National Cancer Institute, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, May 21–22, 2009, Bethesda, MD.

Contributor Statement

All authors of this paper contributed substantively to this paper. The named co-authors contributed directly to the writing of this manuscript, including to the conceptualization of the paper, drafting and revising the text of the manuscript, and approval of the final version of the paper. In addition, all workshop participants listed in the roster in the appendix of this paper contributed to the conceptualization of this manuscript and to the content of the paper, through their participation in the workshop, and approved the final content of the manuscript.

Human Participant Protection

Institutional review board approval was not needed for this manuscript.

Contributor Information

Glorian Sorensen, Harvard School of Public Health and the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.

Paul Landsbergis, State University of New York-Downstate School of Public Health.

Leslie Hammer, Portland State University.

Benjamin Amick, University of Texas Health Science Center and is the Scientific Director of the Institute for Work & Health, Toronto.

Laura Linnan, University of North Carolina Gillings School of Global Public Health.

Antronette Yancey, University of California Los Angeles School of Public Health.

Laura S. Welch, Medical Director at the Center for Construction Research and Training, Silver Spring MD.

Ron Z. Goetzel, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University and Thomson Reuters, Washington, DC.

Kelly M. Flannery, PhD student at the University of Maryland.

Charlotte Pratt, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, NIH.

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