A Qualitative Study on Employees’ Experiences of a Support model for Systematic Work Environment Management
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Study Setting
2.3. Sampling and Participant Recruitment
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Shifting Focus from an Individual to an Organisational Perspective of Work
3.2. Increasing the Awareness of One’s Work Situation
3.2.1. Understanding the Impact of One’s Work Environment
“This will deprive us of our time allotted for meetings, which is already limited. That’s my concern.”
“When we adults are calm and know what to do, then they [the children] also become like that.”“I think so too.”“If we are stressed and confused, then they [the children] also become that way. When no one knows [what to do], they do not know either. If we do not guide them, if we do not show them what to do, then they don’t know.”“I think it is more of a feeling that they are safe, much more joy.”
3.2.2. Understanding the Purpose and Tasks of One’s Work
“Generally speaking, if you talk about this project, I still think that we have become more and more aware.”“I think so too.”“We talk more about this red time [time adding no value to the operation] and are more aware of, oh this is a risk that we need to do something about.”
“We think a lot more about our substitutes now and that they should get the right information and be welcomed in the right way and so on. And don’t throw them into the operations right away and just feed them with information. Instead, they are allowed to take it a slower pace.”
3.3. Building a Team Working with Shared Focuses and Goals
3.3.1. Understanding One’s Own Contribution
“It’s not only about the manager having the right conditions, but it’s really about one self. I mean, if I don’t do anything to improve, it can never be really good either.”
3.3.2. Taking a Collective Responsibility for the Work Tasks
“Now, it is much more about asking and checking with each other. We have [a whiteboard], it says how we should work during the day, but at the same time one side may require a little less than the other side, and then you go and ask if they can do it or if they need help. So we are more, we cooperate across borders.”“More flexible.”“Yes, we do that today, so we think very much about each other. We do that and it makes it more fun, I think. You can see it on the clients, that we laugh and have fun too.”
3.3.3. Communicating Professionally with Each Other
“When you are aware of it, it won’t be a huge problem that you can’t cope with, rather it will be a problem that you together can find solutions for.”“And don’t get upset and annoyed, then it takes so much time, red time, when you get annoyed. Maybe not ‘what the hell, this does not work’; instead, start thinking, ‘what can we do about it?’”“And you don’t have to be afraid to bring things up because you know, this is something that we’re doing so everyone will have it better [at work]. It’s nothing personal.”
4. Discussion
Strength and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Employees (n = 45) Mean (Range) | |
---|---|
Information about the employees | |
Age (year) | 44 (21–62) |
Gender (female/male) | 34/11 |
Years at the workplace | 8 (0.5–24) |
Years of work experience within the profession | 15 (0.5–38) |
Information about the focus groups | |
Number of employees in focus groups | 4.4 (2–8) |
Number of employees that participated in at least two focus groups | 27 |
Percentage of employees that participated in at least two focus groups | 60 |
Shifting Focus from an Individual to an Organisational Perspective of Work |
---|
Increasing the awareness of one’s work situation |
Understanding the impact of one’s work environment |
Understanding the purpose and tasks of one’s work |
Building a team working with shared focus and goals |
Understanding one’s own contribution |
Taking a collective responsibility for the work tasks |
Communicating professionally with each other |
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Hellman, T.; Molin, F.; Svartengren, M. A Qualitative Study on Employees’ Experiences of a Support model for Systematic Work Environment Management. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2019, 16, 3551. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16193551
Hellman T, Molin F, Svartengren M. A Qualitative Study on Employees’ Experiences of a Support model for Systematic Work Environment Management. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2019; 16(19):3551. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16193551
Chicago/Turabian StyleHellman, Therese, Fredrik Molin, and Magnus Svartengren. 2019. "A Qualitative Study on Employees’ Experiences of a Support model for Systematic Work Environment Management" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 16, no. 19: 3551. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16193551
APA StyleHellman, T., Molin, F., & Svartengren, M. (2019). A Qualitative Study on Employees’ Experiences of a Support model for Systematic Work Environment Management. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 16(19), 3551. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16193551