Effects of a Dutch work-site wellness-health program: the Brabantia Project.
S Maes,
C Verhoeven,
F Kittel and
H Scholten
Section of Clinical and Health Psychology, Leiden University, The Netherlands.
OBJECTIVES: This study examined a project designed to improvethe health and wellness of employees of Brabantia, a Dutch manufacturerof household goods, by means of lifestyle changes and changesin working conditions. METHODS: The workers at one Brabantiasite constituted the experimental group, and the workers fromtwo other sites formed the control group. Biomedical variables,lifestyles, general stress reactions, and quality of work weremeasured identically in both groups at baseline and 1, 2, and3 years later. During this period, there was continuous registrationof absenteeism. RESULTS: The interventions brought about favorableshort-term changes in terms of health risks, and there werestable effects on working conditions (especially decision latitude)and absenteeism. CONCLUSIONS: A combination of interventionsdirected at both lifestyles and the work environment can produceextensive and stable effects on health-related variables, wellness,and absenteeism.
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