Griffiths A
Institute of Work, Health & Organisations, University of Nottingham Business School, United Kingdom.
Scand J Work Environ Health. 1999 Dec;25(6):589-96. doi: 10.5271/sjweh.485.
This paper reviews current challenges in the conceptualization, design, and evaluation of organizational interventions to improve occupational health. It argues that attempts to confirm cause-and-effect relationships and allow prediction (maximize internal validity) are often made at the expense of generalizability (external validity). The current, dominant experimental paradigm in the occupational health research establishment, with its emphasis on identifying causal connections, focuses attention on outcome at the expense of process. Interventions should be examined in terms of (i) conceptualization, design and implementation (macroprocesses) and (ii) the theoretical mediating mechanisms involved (microprocesses). These processes are likely to be more generalizable than outcomes. Their examination may require the use of both qualitative and quantitative methodologies. It is suggested that such an approach holds unexplored promise for the healthier design, management, and organization of future work.
本文回顾了在组织干预的概念化、设计和评估以改善职业健康方面当前面临的挑战。文章认为,试图确认因果关系并进行预测(最大化内部效度)往往是以牺牲普遍性(外部效度)为代价的。职业健康研究机构中当前占主导地位的实验范式,因其强调识别因果联系,将注意力集中在结果上而忽视了过程。应从以下方面审视干预措施:(i)概念化、设计和实施(宏观过程)以及(ii)所涉及的理论中介机制(微观过程)。这些过程可能比结果更具普遍性。对它们的审视可能需要同时使用定性和定量方法。建议这种方法为未来工作的更健康设计、管理和组织带来尚未探索的前景。