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Δευτέρα 12 Μαρτίου 2018

The Effect of Workforce Mobility on Intervention Effectiveness Estimates

Abstract
Background
Little is known about how mobile populations of workers may influence the ability to implement, measure, and evaluate health and safety interventions delivered at worksites.
Methods
A simulation study is used to objectively measure both precision and relative bias of six different analytic methods as a function of the amount of mobility observed in the workforce. Those six methods are then used to reanalyze a previously conducted cluster-randomized control trial involving a highly mobile workforce in the construction industry.
Results
As workforce mobility increases, relative bias in treatment effects derived from standard models to analyze cluster-randomized trials also increases. Controlling for amount of time exposed to the intervention can greatly reduce this bias. Analyzing only subsets of workers who exhibit the least amount of mobility can result in decreased precision of treatment effect estimates. We demonstrate a 59% increase in the treatment effect size from the reanalysis of the previously conducted trial.
Conclusions
When evaluating organizational interventions implemented at specific worksites by measuring perceptions and outcomes of workers present at those sites, researchers should consider the effects that the mobility of the workforce may have on the estimated treatment effects. The choice of analytic method can greatly affect both precision and accuracy of estimates.

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