The Effectiveness of Digital Interventions for Psychological Well-Being in the Workplace: A Systematic Review Protocol
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Review Aim
1.2. Review Objectives
- (1)
- To describe measures that have been utilised to assess the effectiveness of digital interventions designed to improve the following:
- (i)
- Psychological well-being at work;
- (ii)
- The prevention/management of poor mental well-being in the workplace.
- (2)
- To identify associations of digital interventions designed to improve the psychological well-being and/or the prevention/management of poor mental well-being in the workplace with individual and organisational outcomes.
- (3)
- To assess whether theory-informed digital interventions for the promotion of psychological well-being are more effective or not, and
- (i)
- to identify which theory or mechanism is associated with greater effectiveness.
2. Methods
2.1. Eligibility
2.1.1. Inclusion Criteria
- a)
- Type of participants:The included studies will report the result of interventions targeting “employees” defined as working-age adults, as well as adults over 65 years that are still in a contracted role within their organisations.
- b)
- Context/Setting:Included studies will report interventions delivered in the workplace setting.
- c)
- Type of Interventions:Included studies will report interventions that are delivered using digital technology via any delivery channel (e.g., these will include but are not limited to web-based interventions, email, mobile phone and apps). Interventions will focus on psychological or mental well-being (e.g., behavioural, cognitive or educational interventions) delivered via any type of digital technology via any delivery channel. Both controlled (e.g., reporting comparisons with a control group, another intervention, face-to-face intervention) and uncontrolled (e.g., single-group studies, pilot and feasibility studies) studies will be considered for inclusion. There will be no restrictions with regards to the timing, duration, or modality of the interventions.
- d)
- Type of studies:The types of the studies that will be included in this review will be experimental (e.g., randomised controlled trials, cluster-randomised Controlled Trials (RCTs), controlled before-and-after studies) or quasi-experimental studies (e.g., one-group pre-test-post-test design, time series designs). Furthermore, included studies will provide an analysis of the results of the intervention.
- e)
- Comparator(s)/control:Included studies will report digital interventions that are compared with any other type of interventions or a no intervention control group, or have no comparator group. Controlled-studies (e.g., reporting comparisons with a no intervention control group, alternative form of digital intervention or a non-digital intervention) and uncontrolled studies (e.g., single group pre-test post-test studies, uncontrolled pilot and feasibility studies) will be considered for inclusion. Separate analysis will be presented for those studies with randomisation to comparator/control groups.
- f)
- Type of publication:Included studies will report empirical research published in peer-reviewed journals or conference proceedings that are accompanied with full-length peer-reviewed papers.
- g)
- Outcome measures:Included studies will report interventions for which the primary outcome is a focus on the improvement of psychological well-being and/or prevention/management of poor mental well-being.
2.1.2. Exclusion Criteria
- a)
- Type of participants:The study will exclude children and young people (under 18 years of age), and retirees.
- b)
- Context/setting:Studies will be excluded if they report interventions delivered in settings other than the participants’ workplace.
- c)
- Type of interventions:Studies will be excluded if (i) they report digital interventions delivered in conjunction with other interventions (since it would be difficult to ascertain the unique contribution of the digital element), and/or (ii) they do not include a psychological intervention (such as reporting on digital interventions without a psychological component that primarily target physical/behavioural outcomes; i.e., weight loss, physical activity, tracking alcohol consumption).
- d)
- Type of studies:Studies will be excluded if they are not original intervention studies, if they are published in journals that are not peer-reviewed, or if they are not in the English language. They will be excluded if they do not report on a digital intervention. Previous relevant systematic reviews will be identified for the purpose of identification of primary studies, but they will not be included in the review. Studies that report case studies, cohort studies, cross-sectional research designs, conference abstracts (without a corresponding full-length peer-reviewed paper) and unpublished research (e.g., unpublished dissertations/theses) will not be included.
- e)
- Comparator(s)/control:Studies will be excluded if they do not use a randomised or quasi-experimental design (e.g., the review will include randomised and non-randomised studies with comparator/control groups as well as those using a one-group pre-test- post-test design, or time series design).
- f)
- Outcome measures:Studies will be excluded if they (i) do not include relevant outcome measures, (ii) report on interventions or outcomes that focus primarily on the clinical treatment of mental health disorders (e.g., Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), major depression), and (iii) if their primary outcomes do not measure psychological well-being and/or mental well-being outcome(s).
2.2. Search Strategy
2.3. Selection Processes
2.4. Data Extraction
2.5. Quality Appraisal
2.6. Data Synthesis
3. Practical Policy Implications
- Recommendations on the use of digital interventions, their strengths and limitations;
- Guidance in identifying specific indicators of psychological well-being in the workplace that can be targeted via an individual-level intervention;
- An understanding of the theories that guide such interventions and the role of theory in their development;
- An exploration of a range of individual-level outcomes, assessed via standardised measures, and their associations with other individual and organisational outcomes.
4. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Psychological Well-Being | ||
---|---|---|
Interventions targeting common mental well-being outcomes at work (e.g., perceived anxiety, depression), | Interventions targeting work-related well-being (e.g., perceived work stress, burnout, work-engagement) | Interventions targeting psychological indicators for mental well-being at work (e.g., positive psychological capital, resilience, self-efficacy, coping strategies, optimism). |
Concepts and constructs for psychological well-being at work | ||
Description of characteristics of interventions | ||
Description of measures and outcomes (primary outcomes and associations with secondary outcomes | ||
Research designs |
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Armaou, M.; Konstantinidis, S.; Blake, H. The Effectiveness of Digital Interventions for Psychological Well-Being in the Workplace: A Systematic Review Protocol. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 255. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17010255
Armaou M, Konstantinidis S, Blake H. The Effectiveness of Digital Interventions for Psychological Well-Being in the Workplace: A Systematic Review Protocol. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020; 17(1):255. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17010255
Chicago/Turabian StyleArmaou, Maria, Stathis Konstantinidis, and Holly Blake. 2020. "The Effectiveness of Digital Interventions for Psychological Well-Being in the Workplace: A Systematic Review Protocol" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 1: 255. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17010255
APA StyleArmaou, M., Konstantinidis, S., & Blake, H. (2020). The Effectiveness of Digital Interventions for Psychological Well-Being in the Workplace: A Systematic Review Protocol. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(1), 255. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17010255