Department of Family Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR, USA; School of Public Health, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR, USA.
Department of Family Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR, USA.
Sleep Health. 2016 Dec;2(4):297-308. doi: 10.1016/j.sleh.2016.09.002.
To evaluate the effects of a workplace-based intervention on actigraphic and self-reported sleep outcomes in an extended care setting.
Cluster randomized trial.
Extended-care (nursing) facilities.
US employees and managers at nursing homes. Nursing homes were randomly selected to intervention or control settings.
The Work, Family and Health Study developed an intervention aimed at reducing work-family conflict within a 4-month work-family organizational change process. Employees participated in interactive sessions with facilitated discussions, role-playing, and games designed to increase control over work processes and work time. Managers completed training in family-supportive supervision.
Primary actigraphic outcomes included: total sleep duration, wake after sleep onset, nighttime sleep, variation in nighttime sleep, nap duration, and number of naps. Secondary survey outcomes included work-to-family conflict, sleep insufficiency, insomnia symptoms and sleep quality. Measures were obtained at baseline, 6-months and 12-months post-intervention.
A total of 1,522 employees and 184 managers provided survey data at baseline. Managers and employees in the intervention arm showed no significant difference in sleep outcomes over time compared to control participants. Sleep outcomes were not moderated by work-to-family conflict or presence of children in the household for managers or employees. Age significantly moderated an intervention effect on nighttime sleep among employees (p=0.040), where younger employees benefited more from the intervention.
In the context of an extended-care nursing home workplace, the intervention did not significantly alter sleep outcomes in either managers or employees. Moderating effects of age were identified where younger employees' sleep outcomes benefited more from the intervention.
评估基于工作场所的干预对长期护理环境中活动记录仪和自我报告睡眠结果的影响。
集群随机试验。
长期护理(护理)设施。
美国养老院的员工和经理。疗养院被随机分配到干预或对照环境中。
工作、家庭和健康研究开发了一项干预措施,旨在通过 4 个月的工作-家庭组织变革过程减少工作-家庭冲突。员工参与了互动会议,包括促进讨论、角色扮演和游戏,旨在增加对工作流程和工作时间的控制。经理们完成了家庭支持监督方面的培训。
主要活动记录仪结果包括:总睡眠时间、睡眠后醒来、夜间睡眠、夜间睡眠变化、午睡时间和午睡次数。次要调查结果包括工作-家庭冲突、睡眠不足、失眠症状和睡眠质量。在干预后 6 个月和 12 个月时进行测量。
共有 1522 名员工和 184 名经理在基线时提供了调查数据。与对照组参与者相比,干预组的经理和员工在睡眠结果方面随时间没有显著差异。对于经理或员工,工作-家庭冲突或家庭中有子女的情况并没有调节睡眠结果。年龄显著调节了员工夜间睡眠的干预效果(p=0.040),年轻员工从干预中获益更多。
在长期护理养老院的工作环境中,干预措施并未显著改变经理或员工的睡眠结果。年龄的调节作用表明,年轻员工的睡眠结果从干预中获益更多。