What is it about?

It is well established that a healthy workforce provides workplaces with many more benefits than if this were not the case. Investing in workplace-based health schemes equips organizations with motivated workforces, increased overall efficiency, subsequent higher morale, reduced personnel and welfare problems, reduced absenteeism, reduced industrial relationship disputes and an improved organizational performance, competitiveness and public image (Chu et al. 2000, Price et al. 2000). Naumanen’s (2006) article represents a contribution to the Occupational Health Nurse workplace-based health-related literature.

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Why is it important?

Where health workplace health promotion programmes are not in place, an increasing body of evidence identifies the substantial health burden and cost that workplaces suffer as a result of ill-health among their staff. The consequences for any organization that has an unhealthy workforce, irrespec- tive of age, are many and include work-related accidents, high rates of absenteeism, high levels of stress, loss of productivity and high incidence of health-related litigation (Verow & Hargreaves 2000, Addley et al. 2001).

Perspectives

It is well established that a healthy workforce provides workplaces with many more benefits than if this were not the case. Investing in workplace-based health schemes equips organizations with motivated workforces, increased overall efficiency, subsequent higher morale, reduced personnel and welfare problems, reduced absenteeism, reduced industrial relationship disputes and an improved organizational per- formance, competitiveness and public image (Chu et al. 2000, Price et al. 2000). However, where such programmes are not in place, an increasing body of evidence identifies the substantial health burden and cost that workplaces suffer as a result of ill-health among their staff. The consequences for any organization that has an unhealthy workforce, irrespective of age, are many and include work-related accidents, high rates of absenteeism, high levels of stress, loss of productivity and high incidence of health-related litigation (Verow & Hargreaves 2000, Addley et al. 2001). Paula Naumanen’s (2006) article represents a useful contribution to the workplace-based health-related literature – especially as there is so little Occupational Health Nurse- based literature in the international press. This said her study needs to be tempered against the rationalization of a ‘true’ health promotion context and model framework for it to have real meaning in the health promotion community. In effect, the findings of this study are best located within a personalized and behavioural framework of reference – which is far more appropriately grounded in a health education context (see Whitehead 2001, 2003, 2004a, 2005a, Whitehead & Russell 2004). Naumanen’s (2006) article, one could argue however, is merely reflecting a majority of the existing occupational health workplace-based literature, which continues to focus on physical and psychological behavioural lifestyle-related objectives, processes and outcomes. This activity usually indicates smoking and alco- hol/illicit drug-monitoring, stress reduction, mental health schemes, employee fitness and exercise, weight control and healthy eating, prevention, early detection and screening programmes for serious diseases, health information and health paraphernalia (Harvey et al. 2000, Addley et al. 2001, Secker & Membrey 2003, Holdsworth et al. 2004). It is true that Naumanen’s (2006) study and model represents a departure from conventional health service- focused health education activity, as it extends to include the wider scope of workplace and its orientation/influence on the health of its workforce – rather than just the conventional health-related activities of medically orientated institutions. In this respect, Naumanen’s (2006) paper also reflects the World Health Organisation’s push to drive health promotion as it pertains to its strategy of focusing activities in particular health settings (Whitehead 2004b,c, 2005b–c, 2006a–b) – with the workplace being one of them (WHO 1995, 1999, 2004a–c). However, Naumanen’s study (2006) still fails to move beyond the scope and practice of the Occupational Health Nurse’s ‘traditional’ role of illness prevention, health education counselling and health screening, while an emerging movement advocates progress toward more holistic workplace-based health schemes that, instead, address the wider organizational, social and environmental determinants of workers in their workplace (Chu et al. 1997, Chu et al. 2000, Brown 2002). It is known that behaviourally orientated workplace health schemes tend to have, at best, ‘modest’ outcomes (Holdsworth et al. 2004). Individual risk factors are an important consideration for Occupational and Environmental Nurses (Stone 2000) – but are much less significant when compared with the broader social, societal, ecological and environmental issues as they impact on organizations and their surrounding communities. This is why Ennals (2002) prompts us to consider the world beyond the workplace – the wider community where workers are engaged as citizens. In reverse, community health action is also useful for encouraging healthy lifestyles in the workplace as part of a social normalization process (Price et al. 2000). Existing occupational health literature often fails to acknowledge the extension of a positive healthy culture in the workplace, as producing the added benefit of potentially influencing the health of immediate and wider family groups of employees and their communities overall. This fundamental aspect of workplace health is hardly ever addressed or acknowledged in occupational health, medicine and nursing fields – hence the lack of visible ‘health promotion’ activity. If Naumanen (2006) had explicitly addressed and endorsed the wider community/societal perspective, instead of just the specific workplace community, then her model would be more representative of a health promotion model – rather than a health education model in its current context. References Addley K, McQuillan P & Ruddle M (2001) Creating healthy workplaces in Northern Ireland: evaluation of a lifestyle and physical activity assessment programme. Occupational Medicine 51, 439–449. Brown E (2002) Connecting healthy workplaces with healthy people. Kai Tiaki: Nursing New Zealand 8, 10. Chu C, Breucker G, Harris N, Stitzel A, Gan X, Gu X & Dwyer S (2000) Health promoting workplaces – international settings development. Health Promotion International 15, 155–167. Chu C, Driscoll T & Dwyer S (1997) The health-promoting work- place: an integrative perspective. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health 21, 377–385. Ennals R (2002) Partnerships for sustainable healthy workplaces. The Annals of Occupational Hygiene 46, 423–428. Harvey HD, Fleming P, Cregan K & Latimer E (2000) The health promotion implications of the knowledge and attitude of employees in relation to health and safety leaflets. International Journal of Environmental Health Research 10, 315–329. Holdsworth M, Raymond NT & Haslam C (2004) Does the heartbeat award scheme in England result in change in dietary behaviour in the workplace? Health Promotion International 19, 197–204. Naumanen P (2006) The health promotion model as assessed by ageing workers. Journal of Clinical Nursing 15, 219–266. Price G, MacKay S & Swinburn B (2000) The heartbeat challenge programme: promoting healthy changes in New Zealand work- places. Health Promotion International 15, 49–55. Secker J & Membrey H (2003) Promoting mental health through employment and developing healthy workplaces: the potential of natural supports at work. Health Education Research 18 (2), 207–215. Stone DS (2000) Health surveillance for health care workers: a vital role for the occupational and environmental health nurse. AAOHN Journal 48, 73–79. Verow P & Hargreaves C (2000) Healthy workplace indicators: costing reasons for sickness absence within the UK National Health Service. Occupational Medicine 50, 251–257. Whitehead D (2001) Health education, behavioural change and social psychology: nursing’s contribution to health promotion? Journal of Advanced Nursing 34, 822–832. Whitehead D (2003) Viewing health promotion and health education as symbiotic paradigms: bridging the theory and practice gap between them. Journal of Clinical Nursing 12, 796–805. Whitehead D (2004a) Health promotion and health education: advancing the concepts. Journal of Advanced Nursing 47, 311–320. Whitehead D (2004b) The European Health Promoting Hospitals (HPH) project: How far on? Health Promotion International 19, 259–267. Whitehead D (2004c) Health Promoting Universities (HPU): the role and function of nursing. Nurse Education Today 24, 466–472. Whitehead D & Russell G (2004) How effective are health education programmes: resistance, reactance, rationality and risk? Recommendations for effective practice. International Journal of Nursing Studies 41, 163–172. Whitehead D (2005a) Overview – the culture, context and progress of health promotion in nursing. In: Health Promoting Practice: The Contribution of Nurses and Allied Health Professions. (Scriven A ed.). Palgrave, London (in press). Whitehead D (2005b) Health Promoting Hospitals (HPH): the role and function of nursing. Journal of Clinical Nursing 14, 20–27. Whitehead D (2005c) Workplace health promotion: the role and responsibilities of nursing managers. Journal of Nursing Manage- ment 14, 59–68. Whitehead D (2006a) The Health Promoting School (HPS): what role for nursing? Journal of Clinical Nursing 15, 264–271. Whitehead D (2006b) The Health Promoting Prison (HPP) and the imperative for nursing. International Journal of Nursing Studies 43, 123–131. World Health Organisation (1995) Global Strategy on Occupational Health for All: The Way to Health at Work. Recommendation of the Second Meeting of the WHO Collaborating Centres in Occu- pational Health – 1994, Beijing, China. WHO, Geneva. World Health Organisation-Western Pacific Regional Office (1999) Regional Guidelines for the Development of Healthy Workplaces. WHO-WPRO, Manila. World Health Organisation (2004a) Healthy Workplaces: World Health Organisation Regional Office for Europe. Available at: http://www.euro.who.int/healthyworkplaces (last accessed 8 June 2005). World Health Organisation (2004b) Occupational Health. Available at: http://www.who.int/oeh/ (last accessed 8 June 2005). 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Dr Dean Whitehead
Flinders University

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This page is a summary of: Commentary on The health promotion model as assessed by ageing workers. Journal of Clinical Nursing 15, 219?266, Journal of Clinical Nursing, December 2006, Wiley,
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2702.2006.01323.x.
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