Safety and Health at Work Vol. 12 Issue 3 2021
Improving the Workplace Experience of Caregiver-Employees: A Time-Series Analysis of a Workplace Intervention (Original Article)
    
    
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Title
Safety and Health at Work Vol. 12 Issue 3 2021
Improving the Workplace Experience of Caregiver-Employees: A Time-Series Analysis of a Workplace Intervention (Original Article)
            Improving the Workplace Experience of Caregiver-Employees: A Time-Series Analysis of a Workplace Intervention (Original Article)
Subject
Caregiving, Intervention, Time series, Workelife balance, Workplace support
            Description
Background: Rapid population aging in developed countries has resulted in the working-age population increasingly being tasked with the provision of informal care.
Methods: An educational intervention was delivered to 21 carer-employees employed at a Canadian University. Work role function, job security, schedule control, workefamily conflict, familywork conflict, and supervisor and coworker support were measured as part of an aggregated workplace experience score. This score was used to measure changes pre/post intervention and at a follow-up period approximately 12 months post intervention. Three random intercept models were created via linear mixed modeling to illustrate changes in participants' workplace experience across time.
Results: All three models reported statistically significant random and fixed effects intercepts, with a positive coefficient of change.
Conclusion: This suggests that the intervention demonstrated an improvement of the workplace experience score for participants over time, with the association particularly strong immediately after
intervention.
            Methods: An educational intervention was delivered to 21 carer-employees employed at a Canadian University. Work role function, job security, schedule control, workefamily conflict, familywork conflict, and supervisor and coworker support were measured as part of an aggregated workplace experience score. This score was used to measure changes pre/post intervention and at a follow-up period approximately 12 months post intervention. Three random intercept models were created via linear mixed modeling to illustrate changes in participants' workplace experience across time.
Results: All three models reported statistically significant random and fixed effects intercepts, with a positive coefficient of change.
Conclusion: This suggests that the intervention demonstrated an improvement of the workplace experience score for participants over time, with the association particularly strong immediately after
intervention.
Creator
Regina Ding, Anastassios Dardas, Li Wang, Allison Williams
            Publisher
Elsevier Korea LLC
            Date
September 2021
            Contributor
Sri Wahyuni
            Format
PDF
            Language
English
            Type
Text
            Coverage
Safety and Health at Work Vol. 12 Issue 3 2021
            Files
Citation
Regina Ding, Anastassios Dardas, Li Wang, Allison Williams, “Safety and Health at Work Vol. 12 Issue 3 2021
Improving the Workplace Experience of Caregiver-Employees: A Time-Series Analysis of a Workplace Intervention (Original Article),” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed October 31, 2025, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/2204.
    Improving the Workplace Experience of Caregiver-Employees: A Time-Series Analysis of a Workplace Intervention (Original Article),” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed October 31, 2025, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/2204.