Attitudes of Company Executives toward a Comprehensive Workplace Health Management—Results of an Exploratory Cross-Sectional Study in Germany
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Background
1.2. Different Attitudes in Society toward a Comprehensive Workplace Health Management?
1.3. Objectives of the Study
- (1)
- What attitudes do company executives have toward comprehensive workplace health management?
- (2)
- How common are those attitudes? In other words: how high is the level of company executives’ agreement with those attitudes?
- (3)
- Which variables statistically explain company executives’ agreement with a given attitude?
2. Methods
2.1. Study Participants and Data Collection
2.2. Standardized Questionnaire
2.3. Statistical Analysis
2.3.1. Exploratory Factor Analysis
2.3.2. Construction of Scores Expressing the Degree of Agreement with Attitudes
2.3.3. Multiple Regression Analyses to Determine Predictors of Respondents’ Agreement with Attitudes
- (a)
- company size, i.e., current number of employees (continuous variable),
- (b)
- type of business: (i) non-craft business vs. (ii) craft business (binary variable),
- (c)
- type of industry branch [65]: (i) branch without increased work-related health hazards such as risk of occupational diseases (into this category we grouped energy and water supply, trade and commerce, hotels and restaurants, transport and communications, banking and insurance, real estate and housing, public administration, education and training, services and utilities) vs. (ii) branch with increased health hazards (into this category we grouped agriculture and forestry, fishing and fish farming, mining/stone/earth industry, production and manufacturing, construction, maintenance and repair, health and social services) (binary variable),
- (d)
- availability of an occupational health physician /company doctor (binary variable),
- (e)
- respondent’s position within the company: (i) managing director vs. (ii) personal department member vs. (iii) other position (categorical variable; transformed into three dummy variables for the regression analyses),
- (f)
- age of respondent (continuous variable), and
- (g)
- gender of respondent (binary variable).
3. Results
3.1. Participants and Sample Characteristics
3.2. Results of the Exploratory Factor Analysis: Attitudes toward Workplace Health Management
3.3. Respondents’ Agreement with Attitudes toward Workplace Health Management
3.4. Predictors of Respondents’ Agreement with Attitudes toward Workplace Health Management
3.4.1. Predictors of Respondents’ Agreement with Attitude ‘Positive View on General Health Services in the Company’
3.4.2. Predictors of Respondents’ Agreement with Attitude ‘Workplace Health Management and Workplace Health Promotion Create Added Value to Companies’
3.4.3. Predictors of Respondents’ Agreement with Attitude ‘General Skepticism toward Workplace Health Management’
3.4.4. Predictors of Respondents’ Agreement with Attitude ‘Positive View on Occupational Safety and Health according to Corporate Social Responsibility’
3.4.5. Predictors of Respondents’ Agreement with ‘Positive View on Carrying Out Minor Medical Checks at the Company Doctor’s Practice’
4. Discussion
4.1. General Aspects
4.2. Remarks on Individual Attitudes, Respondents’ Agreement with Attitudes, and the Predictors Explaining Respondents’ Agreement with Attitudes
4.3. Contextual Aspects
4.4. Strengths of the Study
4.5. Limitations of the Study
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Company Size | 10–50 Employees | 51–100 Employees | 101–200 Employees | 201–500 Employees | >500 Employees |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Number of companies addressed | n = 570 | n = 159 | n = 89 | n = 62 | n = 26 |
Response (%/n) | 22.3% n = 127 | 25.8% n = 41 | 31.5% n = 28 | 32.3% n = 20 | 23.1% n = 6 |
Occupational health physician available (%/n) * | 29.1% n = 37 | 63.4% n = 26 | 78.6% n = 22 | 85.0% n = 17 | 83.3% n = 5 |
Occupational safety engineer available (%/n) ‡ | 63.0% n = 80 | 85.4% n = 35 | 100.0% n = 28 | 100.0% n = 20 | 100.0% n = 6 |
Characteristic | Characteristic Values | |
---|---|---|
Position of respondent | Managing director | 52.7% (n = 117) |
Member of personnel department | 34.7% (n = 77) | |
Other | 11.7% (n = 26) | |
Missing | 0.9% (n = 2) | |
Gender of respondent | Male | 54.1% (n = 120) |
Female | 45.0% (n = 100) | |
Missing | 0.9% (n = 2) | |
Age of respondent (in years) | Mean | 50.3 |
Median | 52.0 | |
Standard deviation | 10.6 | |
Min-Max | 25–82 |
Factor | Initial Eigenvalues of Factors and Explained Variance | Rotated Sum of Squared Factor Loads and Explained Variance (after 9 Iterations) + | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Total Eigenvalue * | Explained Variance (%) | Cumulated Explained Variance (%) | Total Eigenvalue | Explained Variance (%) | Cumulated Explained Variance (%) | |
1 | 7.7 | 29.5 | 29.5 | 3.9 | 14.9 | 14.9 |
2 | 2.3 | 8.7 | 38.2 | 3.1 | 12.1 | 27.0 |
3 | 2.1 | 8.0 | 46.2 | 2.7 | 10.3 | 37.3 |
4 | 1.5 | 5.0 | 51.8 | 2.4 | 9.4 | 46.7 |
5 | 1.4 | 5.4 | 57.2 | 1.9 | 7.4 | 54.0 |
6 | 1.1 | 4.1 | 61.4 | 1.9 | 7.3 | 61.4 |
Factor No. & Name | Item No. | Wording of the Declarative Statement (Item) | Factor Load # |
---|---|---|---|
1. Positive view on general health services in the company | 1.1 | Offers for early disease detection (e.g., risk factors for heart attack) should not be made in the company. | −0.86 |
1.2 | Cancer screening services (e.g., colorectal cancer) should not be offered in the company. | −0.85 | |
1.3 | Screening examinations for diseases that usually do not occur until retirement age should not be offered in the enterprise. | −0.78 | |
1.4 | Early detection examinations for diseases that often occur before retirement age should be offered in the company. | 0.64 | |
1.5 | All employees should be offered vaccinations against non-work-related common diseases (e.g., tetanus) in the company. | 0.55 | |
1.6 | All employees should be offered vaccinations for private travel in the company. | 0.51 | |
2. WHM and WHP create added value for companies | 2.1 | Good implementation of workplace health management increases employees’ job satisfaction. | 0.65 |
2.2 | Comprehensive, structured workplace health management is an investment that pays off. | 0.65 | |
2.3 | Workplace health promotion that is tailored to requirements helps to retain employees. | 0.64 | |
2.4 | Sustainable health promotion must strengthen employees’ personal responsibility for their own health. | 0.59 | |
2.5 | Comprehensive workplace health management can only work in larger companies. | −0.59 | |
2.6 | Workplace health promotion that goes beyond legal requirements adds value to the company. | 0.58 | |
2.7 | It is sufficient for companies to fulfill the legal requirements for occupational health and safety and company reintegration management. | −0.43 | |
3. General skepticism toward WHM | 3.1 | Workplace health management serves the image of the company rather than the health of the employees. | 0.73 |
3.2 | Health is a private matter for each employee. | 0.66 | |
3.3 | Before society demands more commitment from companies, general health care should be improved. | 0.58 | |
3.4 | Workplace health management is difficult to implement in company practice. | 0.49 | |
4. Positive view on companies as setting for health promotion | 4.1 | Good workplace health promotion offerings can compensate for deficits in general health care (e.g., long waiting times). | 0.69 |
4.2 | The company is particularly well positioned to strengthen employees’ personal responsibility for their own health. | 0.66 | |
4.3 | The workplace is the ideal place to address employees for health. | 0.58 | |
4.4 | Companies should not only address work-related health hazards, but also the general health of employees. | 0.49 | |
5. Positive view on … * | 5.1 | Companies contribute to maintaining the health of employees through good working conditions. | 0.72 |
5.2 | Companies must avoid work-related health hazards to employees. | 0.71 | |
5.3 | Companies take on social responsibility through comprehensive workplace health management. | 0.45 | |
6. Positive view on… ** | 6.1 | Anyone who has to measure blood pressure regularly should be able to do so at the company doctor’s practice. | 0.83 |
6.2 | Chronically ill employees should also be able to have necessary laboratory check-ups performed by the company doctor. | 0.74 |
Attitude | Mean of Agreement Score * | Standard Deviation | Range of Agreement Score | Count of Valid Agreement Score Values ** (n) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Positive view on general health services in the company (6 items) | 3.26 | 2.23 | 0.00–10.00 | 198 |
Workplace health management and workplace health promotion create added value to companies (7 items) | 6.08 | 1.80 | 0.00–10.00 | 179 |
General skepticism toward workplace health management (4 items) | 5.02 | 1.99 | 0.00–10.00 | 196 |
Positive view on companies as setting for health promotion (4 items) | 4.72 | 1.85 | 0.00–10.00 | 197 |
Positive view on occupational safety and health according to corporate social responsibility (3 items) | 7.86 | 1.48 | 3.33–10.00 | 192 |
Positive view on carrying out minor medical checks at the company doctor’s practice (2 items) | 4.91 | 2.71 | 0.00–10.00 | 168 |
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Siegel, A.; Hoge, A.C.; Ehmann, A.T.; Martus, P.; Rieger, M.A. Attitudes of Company Executives toward a Comprehensive Workplace Health Management—Results of an Exploratory Cross-Sectional Study in Germany. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 11475. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182111475
Siegel A, Hoge AC, Ehmann AT, Martus P, Rieger MA. Attitudes of Company Executives toward a Comprehensive Workplace Health Management—Results of an Exploratory Cross-Sectional Study in Germany. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(21):11475. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182111475
Chicago/Turabian StyleSiegel, Achim, Aileen C. Hoge, Anna T. Ehmann, Peter Martus, and Monika A. Rieger. 2021. "Attitudes of Company Executives toward a Comprehensive Workplace Health Management—Results of an Exploratory Cross-Sectional Study in Germany" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 21: 11475. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182111475
APA StyleSiegel, A., Hoge, A. C., Ehmann, A. T., Martus, P., & Rieger, M. A. (2021). Attitudes of Company Executives toward a Comprehensive Workplace Health Management—Results of an Exploratory Cross-Sectional Study in Germany. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(21), 11475. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182111475