A Narrative Inquiry into the Practices of Healthcare Workers’ Wellness Program: The SEED Experience in New South Wales, Australia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Wellness and Resilience of Healthcare Workforce
2. Methodology
2.1. Study Setting
2.2. Recruitment and Sample Characteristics
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Data Analysis
- How is SEED described? What are its practices?
- What do people say about their own or others’ wellness or un-wellness and ways that SEED influenced that?
- How are the absence or presence of resources described?
- What relationships between people are discussed?
- How do people do things differently because of SEED?
3. Results
3.1. Responsive and Compassionate Leading
“We needed to come up with a plan as to, how are we going to cope going forward. And so [Leader] made some suggestions about connecting with the crew and within a very short period of time, we had run sessions, understood what people were actually wanting”.(S01)
“…the most important thing was that thought was given and it was instantaneously accommodated, which brought the faith and trust and my belief in ‘I’m validated and heard and that, wow, someone’s listening to concerns but the solution to it is happening quite quickly’”.(S16)
“It was giving people permission and I think I was one of those people, as a leader that just went, ‘We can do this. It’s okay to do this. You can do this [participate in SEED] because this is what we need. This is collectively what we need, and you have my support to do it’”.(S21)
3.2. Co-Designing Wellness Activities with Staff
“There is entrenched concern or cynicism from the staff, certainly when new programs come out it’s always with suspicion, ‘What are they trying to make me change, what’s this in a consequence of, what am I going to be measured on?’”.(S25)
3.3. Listening to Understand
“…the leader [SEED facilitator] showed us the way, gave us some tools to hold the space, which we could use, especially for people that lost their house. Because that would come up and you didn’t know what to say, but boy, sitting there listening, holding that space, sort of did … gave them a fair bit of relief, I suppose, which was rewarding once you knew that you were actually doing it. So being shown how to hold the space was one of the biggest things I got out of it”.(S06)
3.4. Creating a Safe and Healing Space
“They made you feel that it was all okay. You weren’t being judged, you weren’t going to say anything wrong, and they valued your input. So, it just made you want to open up more and be part of it”.(S14)
3.5. Connecting with Others
“The interesting thing about SEED is being able to overtly create those connections on a different level and we do know that when people know each other as human beings, they’re likely to be more compassionate, caring and understanding of each other”.(S33)
“SEED is about enhancing relationships. It’s about making new friends. I’ve made all these new friends right across ISLHD now, which I never would have had the chance to do, and that makes our work easier and our work stronger”.(S17)
“So, it was like making us spend time with each other, and for lots of people that was really uncomfortable, you know, it was! [It] was one of the hardest initiatives, because people did not want to go and have coffee with someone they did not know”.(S03)
3.6. Collective Caring
“In a work environment you can tend to be very professional, but SEED allowed all the barriers to be broken down and that people actually started to really care, as human beings, about one another. Not that they didn’t before, but in a really meaningful and very supportive way”.(S29)
3.7. Diversifying and Localising Wellness Activities
“I think just that it’s got to be site specific, whatever you do. You can’t make this a cookie cutter approach. You’ve really got to find out what the needs of each particular site are because each site works so differently”.(S20)
“Some of the things that we do, we have great success because we’re not following a standard framework or model that we’ve been told to do, we’re actually guided by what the staff are thinking and feeling, and then just trying something new”.(S19)
“There were always people who didn’t receive that kind of support very well. They’re just not people that respond to it, and I know that there’s been similar experiences at [site] where it’s just not their thing, and it’s not everybody’s thing”.(S21)
3.8. Striving for Sustainability
“In terms of sustainability, we’ve got a small team that are our Wellness Warriors and they’re the ones that plan our activities and approach us with some of their ideas. There’s about six different things going on in our department that we all contribute to and can be involved in. So, there’s a little planning committee and if someone leaves the department, they will replace that person with another Wellness Warrior to form that little team”.(S29)
“I think it was more prioritised when we were in greater crisis. I think we all felt justified. And I think now we’ve done it and … we need to still make more of an effort to keep that going. It’s hard”.(S03)
“We’re a very high-paced ward. We have lots of turnover. We have very sick patients. Staff do find it very, very challenging to take that time out, even when it’s Where’s Wally on the ward, it’s really hard to draw that attention away from a sick patient”.(S24)
4. Discussion
Implications for Policy and Practice
5. Strengths and Limitations of the Study
6. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Gender (n) | Ethnicity (n) | Mean Age in Years (Range) | Work Role (n) | Mean Number of Years in Current Role (Range) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Female 29 Male 4 | Aboriginal Australian 3 Caucasian 26 Other 4 | 49.9 (32–65) | Nurse * 9 Nurse Educator 5 Manager/Executive 10 Health and Security 2 Allied Health 2 Administration 3 Project Manager 2 | 7.5 (1–37) |
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Olcoń, K.; Allan, J.; Fox, M.; Everingham, R.; Pai, P.; Keevers, L.; Mackay, M.; Degeling, C.; Cutmore, S.-A.; Finlay, S.; et al. A Narrative Inquiry into the Practices of Healthcare Workers’ Wellness Program: The SEED Experience in New South Wales, Australia. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 13204. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192013204
Olcoń K, Allan J, Fox M, Everingham R, Pai P, Keevers L, Mackay M, Degeling C, Cutmore S-A, Finlay S, et al. A Narrative Inquiry into the Practices of Healthcare Workers’ Wellness Program: The SEED Experience in New South Wales, Australia. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(20):13204. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192013204
Chicago/Turabian StyleOlcoń, Katarzyna, Julaine Allan, Mim Fox, Ruth Everingham, Padmini Pai, Lynne Keevers, Maria Mackay, Chris Degeling, Sue-Anne Cutmore, Summer Finlay, and et al. 2022. "A Narrative Inquiry into the Practices of Healthcare Workers’ Wellness Program: The SEED Experience in New South Wales, Australia" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 20: 13204. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192013204
APA StyleOlcoń, K., Allan, J., Fox, M., Everingham, R., Pai, P., Keevers, L., Mackay, M., Degeling, C., Cutmore, S. -A., Finlay, S., & Falzon, K. (2022). A Narrative Inquiry into the Practices of Healthcare Workers’ Wellness Program: The SEED Experience in New South Wales, Australia. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(20), 13204. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192013204