Economic Evaluation of Periodic Occupational Health Screening
- Conditions
- Occupational HealthScreeningSurveys and Questionnaires
- Interventions
- Other: Electronic survey with selective consultations
- Registration Number
- NCT04684316
- Lead Sponsor
- KU Leuven
- Brief Summary
In Belgium, Periodic Health Screenings (PHS) are obliged by law for several occupations, including safety functions, jobs with heightened vigilance, work that involves physical, biological or chemical agents or tasks that are an ergonomic or mental burden. Scientifically it remains an open question whether these screenings guarantee the prevention of later health problems or problems with functioning at work.
The objective of this study is to compare the cost-effectiveness of PHS with an online health screening tool with selective follow-up. In five Flemish hospitals, the employees eligible for PHS (exempting frequent exposure to ionizing radiation, preparation of cytostatics, or exposure to carcinogens, mutagens, or reprotoxic substances) are randomly assigned to a control group (receiving classical PHS at the occupational physician), or an intervention group (e-tool with selective follow-up by the physician). In the intervention group, 20% of the employees is seen by the occupational physician, based on their responses to the questionnaire. The intervention- and control group complete the questionnaire three times: before the study start (June 2019), in February 2020, and in September 2020. The study ends in March 2021.
The survey is developed as part of the study. On the one hand it contains questions for the cost-effectiveness analysis: health care use, absenteeism and presenteeism, and health literacy. On the other hand, a validated questionnaire is developed based on a systematic review of existing validated and reliable instruments, a Delphi panel of occupational physicians, and a pilot- and field study that test the reliability and validity of the survey (and its referral to the occupational physician). For the latter, the employees' health, occupational risks, work ability, and lifestyle (alcohol abuse, drug abuse, physical activity, and nutrition) are surveyed. Access to the occupational physician remains guaranteed by means of an additional question ("Do you wish to discuss the results of your survey with the occupational physician?") and as spontaneous consultations with the occupational physicians remain possible before, during, and after the trial.
The survey platform Qualtrics is used for data collection. Researchers have no insight in personal data, nor the medical files of employees, and only analyse the coded data from the surveys. Invitations for the survey are sent by the occupational physician. The coded questionnaires are saved on a KU Leuven survey, following the ISO-9001-procedure and the legal data storage period. The employer has no insight in the data. The study is performed by Jonas Steel, supervised by prof. dr. Jeroen Luyten and prof. dr. Lode Godderis, and financed by the Belgian Association for Occupational Physicians, and three external services for prevention and protection at work: IDEWE, Liantis, and Mensura.
- Detailed Description
In Belgium, Periodic Health Screenings (PHS) are obliged by law for several occupations and allow for early detection of health problems, advice towards risk-free behaviour, timely risk reductions or referrals to other care personnel. This makes them one of the key preventive activities of the occupational physician (OP). However, there are as of yet no strong research indications for the optimal organisation of these occupational health screenings. A recent systematic review of general health screening (not only at the workplace) did not find studies that indicated an effect (e.g. on general mortality, cardiovascular mortality, or cancer mortality), but indicated they could lead to adverse effects such as overtreatment or misplaced reassurance. Reviews in other domains such as vision screening of older drivers, tuberculosis screening of healthcare workers, tomography for lung cancer, of pre-employment investigations frequently found too few high quality studies to draw strong conclusions. There is some evidence for the effectiveness of biometric screening in reducing the number of non-communicable diseases, especially when aimed at higher risk employees or if they are combined with well-designed health programmes. However, it remains an open question whether more focused occupational screenings with risk-selection, as is the case in Belgium and the Netherlands, are beneficial.
This protocol will therefore present a study on annual periodic health screenings (PHS). In this sense, it will contribute to evidence-based decision-making for policy makers, who are currently planning to change the legislation.
A theoretically ideal experiment would compare a group of employees undergoing periodic health screening with a group without an intervention. However, three factors make the formulation of an alternative intervention necessary. Firstly, from an ethical point of view, adequate medical follow-up should be provided for all participants in the study. Secondly, current legislation requires employees to undergo screening for "risky" occupational activities to assess their aptitude for those activities. Thirdly, it is important to provide employers with an alternative form of care or follow-up, since it would not be beneficial (for any party) if employers paid the same fees to the Services for Prevention and Protection at Work (SPPW), but got less care in return. The experiment will therefore compare care-as-usual (periodic health screenings by the OP - the control group) with employees that complete an electronic health survey with selective follow-up (the intervention group). The latter encompasses that the employees' answers on the health screening tool determine whether he/she will be seen by the OP. This allows immediate data collection for the experiment, and at the same time guarantees follow-up of employees with health problems by SPPW.
The survey wants to answer to the demands (of a good PHS) of the International Labour Office by focusing on primary (sometimes secondary) prevention, by taking a risk analysis as a starting point, by allowing for both individual and collective measures, by formulating goals in advance, and because finding problems leads to adequate action. To fulfil these goals, the questionnaire will not only make use of health information (health status, early detection of occupational disease, accidents), but also of other signals that could point towards a higher risk of absence or reduced functioning: absenteeism, presenteeism, health care use, working conditions, job-specific factors, and lifestyle. In addition, the health literacy of personnel is taken into account to assess how well information about health at work (eg coming from the OP) is understood. Briefly summarized, health literacy contains three dimensions: access - how employees are able to seek and obtain health information - "understanding" - the expectations, perceived utility and interpretation of health information - and "behaviour" - the employee's intention to change behaviour as well as his behaviour itself. Finally, it is possible to measure the help-seeking behaviour of employees, to assess their tendency to seek medical care when needed. By incorporating these aspects into the survey and study, we will circumvent the complication that many preventive interventions have to face: health ameliorations and decreases in health care use, absenteeism and presenteeism only occur after several years.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 889
- all personnel types that are eligible for periodic health screenings: personnel with safety functions, jobs with heightened vigilance, work that involves physical, biological or chemical agents or tasks that are an ergonomic or mental burden
- working age (18-70 years old)
- able to understand and answer the questionnaire in Dutch
- occupational groups that perform especially risky activities (frequent exposure to ionizing radiation, preparation of cytostatics, or exposure to carcinogens, mutagens, or reprotoxic substances)
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- SINGLE_GROUP
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Intervention: Electronic survey with selective consultations Electronic survey with selective consultations In the intervention group, all employees at risk receive a (employee-unique) link to an online health screening questionnaire by email. Dependent upon their answers, 20% of the employees (i.e. the 20% of the employees that mostly need contact with the OP) are referred to the occupational physician for a discussion of the results. The OP then gives medical advice, refers to a healthcare provider (e.g. general practitioner or specialist), or books a (follow-up) appointment with an occupational health specialist (OP, occupational nurse, etc.).
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Self-perceived health change after 15 months Self-perceived health using a visual analog score: 0-100 (from worst health the employee can imagine to the best health the employee can imagine)
Presenteeism change after 15 months Presenteeism using the IMTA Productivity Cost Questionnaire (iPCQ), which uses a visual analog score to indicate how much work the employee could perform compared to a normal working day
Spontaneous consultations with the occupational physician change after 15 months Self-reported number of spontaneous consultations the employee had with the occupational physician
Stress change after 15 months Score that represents the risk of stress based on the Copenhagen Psychosocial Questionnaire: 0-12 (from low to high risk of stress)
Burnout change after 15 months Score that represents the risk of burnout based on the Copenhagen Psychosocial Questionnaire: 0-16 (from low to high risk of burnout)
Sleep problems change after 15 months Score that represents the risk of sleep problems based on the Copenhagen Psychosocial Questionnaire: 0-16 (from low to high risk of burnout)
General mental health change after 15 months Score that represents the general mental health based on the General Health Questionnaire: 0-12 (from worst to best mental health)
Need for recovery after work change after 15 months Score that represents the need for recovery after work, based on the Need for Recovery scale: 0-11 (from lowest to highest need for recovery after work)
Absenteeism change after 15 months Absenteeism in days absent using the IMTA Productivity Cost Questionnaire (iPCQ)
Incidence of musculoskeletal health functioning problems change after 15 months Count of how many respondents indicated to have musculoskeletal health functioning problems
Referrals to other health providers change after 15 months Number of contact moments with other healthcare providers based on a referral by the occupational physician
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Help-seeking behaviour change after 15 months Score representing the help-seeking behaviour of the employee, based on the General Help-Seeking Questionnaire: 0-128 (high self-assessed probability of seeking help to low self-assessed probability of seeking help)
Health literacy change after 15 months Score representing the health literacy of the employee, based on an adapted version of the European Health Literacy Survey (EU-HLS): 0-64 (low to high health literacy)
Trial Locations
- Locations (4)
Heilig Hart Leuven
🇧🇪Leuven, Flanders, Belgium
AZ Nikolaas
🇧🇪Sint-Niklaas, Flanders, Belgium
Heilig Hart Tienen
🇧🇪Tienen, Flanders, Belgium
AZ Vesalius
🇧🇪Tongeren, Flanders, Belgium