Designing SMARTer work to reduce psychosocial risks: Evaluating the effectiveness of a participatory workredesign intervention in aged care.
Source Title
Additional URLs
Faculty
School
Collection
Abstract
Recent reports highlight complex systematic problems in the aged care sector, including high risks for psychosocial injuries related to work design. Among the most cited risks are high emotional demands and excess workload driven by complex legislative, industry, and organisational factors. There is a lack of documented intervention research that targets complex configurations of job demands experienced by direct care workers who make the majority of paid workers in aged care. The current project titled Designing SMARTer work to reduce psychosocial risks: Evaluating the effectiveness of a participatory work-redesign intervention in aged care was funded by Safe Work Australia through the grant initiative “Interventions to manage work-related psychosocial hazards”. The grant was awarded to a team of researchers at the Centre for Transformative Work Design at Curtin University and conducted across 2022 and 2023. We partnered with a large Australian nonfor-profit aged care provider to conduct a primary, organisational-level work redesign intervention aimed to modify the work environment to minimise and eliminate psychosocial risks associated with increased demands in the sector. The resulting intervention comprised integrated solutions across factors that affect work design, including system (e.g., rosters, workforce management) and local influences (e.g., task distribution methods) developed via a participatory approach.
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Wilson, S.; Toye, Christine; Aoun, S.; Slatyer, S.; Moyle, W.; Beattie, E. (2017)Background: Family carers of people living and dying with dementia experience grief. The prevalence, predictors and associated factors of grief in this population have been identified, and psychosocial interventions to ...
-
Kent, Peter; Kjaer, P. (2012)Background: There is considerable interest in whether best practice management of nonspecific low back pain (NSLBP) should include the targeting of treatment to subgroups of people with identifiable clinical characteristics. ...
-
Brewer, W.; Lambert, T.; Witt, K.; Dileo, J.; Duff, Cameron; Crlenjak, C.; McGorry, P.; Murphy, B. (2015)© 2015 Elsevier Ltd. Background: The first episode of psychosis is a crucial period when early intervention can alter the trajectory of the young person's ongoing mental health and general functioning. After an investigation ...