Teleworking to support accommodation, inclusion, and health of aging workers: Protocol for a study to design, validate, and test a reflective application guide

Téléchargements

Téléchargements par mois depuis la dernière année

Lecours, A., Hong, Q. N., Maclure, J., Bédard-Mercier, R., Vincent, C., Boucher, N. et Lord, M. M. (2023). Teleworking to support accommodation, inclusion, and health of aging workers: Protocol for a study to design, validate, and test a reflective application guide. JMIR Research Protocols, 12 . Article e46114. ISSN 1929-0748 DOI 10.2196/46114

[thumbnail of LECOURS_A_30_ED.pdf]
Prévisualisation
PDF
Disponible sous licence Creative Commons Attribution.

Télécharger (933kB) | Prévisualisation

Résumé

Abstract

Background:
Aging workers constitute a growing population in many countries and form an indispensable and qualified resource, especially in the context of the labor shortage. Despite work's many benefits for individuals, organizations, and societies, it also presents several risks and challenges that may lead to occupational injuries. Thus, rehabilitation professionals and managers working with this emerging and unique clientele during their return to work after an absence often lack the tools and skills to support them, especially in the changing world of work that includes the rise of telework. Indeed, as an increasingly present work arrangement, telework has the potential to be used as an accommodation modality that can facilitate inclusion and healthy participation in the workplace. However, the implications of this topic for aging workers require study.

Objective:
This paper presents the protocol of a study that aims to develop a reflective telework application guide to support the accommodation, inclusion, and health of aging workers after an absence from work. Specifically, this study will (1) explore the experience of aging workers, managers, and rehabilitation professionals regarding telework and its impact on accommodation, inclusion, and health; (2) use a validated logic model to design a reflective application guide; and (3) test and evaluate the guide.

Methods:
Following a 3-phase developmental research design, individual interviews with aging teleworkers, managers, and rehabilitation professionals will enable the collection of qualitative data to be used in generating a logic model of levers and good practices, leading to the creation of a reflective application guide. Validation of this guide by workers and managers to measure its acceptability and applicability in daily life will precede its implementation.

Results: Data collection began in spring 2023 and initial results are expected in fall 2023. This study aims to generate a concrete tool-namely, the reflective telework application guide-that rehabilitation professionals could use to support managers and aging workers during their return to work through the healthy use of telework. All phases of the study include conducting dissemination activities to share the results of the project and increase its sustainability potential (ie, publication through social networks, podcasts, conferences, and scientific publications).

Conclusions:
As the first of its kind, this project aims to produce innovative impacts at several levels, including practical, scientific, and societal impacts. In addition, the results will provide healthy solutions to the labor shortage in a changing world of work, where digital and teleworking are becoming increasingly important.

Type de document: Article
Mots-clés libres: Aging workers Health Intervention Qualitative research Telecommute Telework
Date de dépôt: 23 juill. 2024 13:29
Dernière modification: 23 juill. 2024 13:31
Version du document déposé: Version officielle de l'éditeur
URI: https://depot-e.uqtr.ca/id/eprint/11410

Actions (administrateurs uniquement)

Éditer la notice Éditer la notice