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Quality of occupational health provision: two rating scales and their determinants

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journal contribution
posted on 2008-09-01, 00:00 authored by K Venables, Steven AllenderSteven Allender
Background To develop quality scales for occupational health services (OHSs) and describe and explain variation in quality across the UK university sector.

Methods Analysis of data from a national survey, to which 93 of 117 (79%) UK universities responded, and from the Higher Education Statistics Agency. Two quality scales were generated, one from the 1985 International Labour Organization recommendations on OHSs and one from clinicians’ perceptions (good, adequate, poor) about their OHS. The determinants examined were number of university staff, type of OHS (in-house, contracted, none/other), number of full-time equivalent occupational health doctors and nurses and OHS leadership (doctor, nurse, other).

Results There was wide variation in quality and a correlation (r = 0.65) between scales. In-house service, increasing service size and leadership by a doctor or nurse were determinants of higher quality; size of the university was not statistically significant after taking account of these factors.

Conclusions Some university OHSs may not be structured or operated to promote the highest quality of service. Inspection of individual quality scale items may be informative. These scales may be applicable in other employment sectors.

History

Journal

Occupational medicine

Volume

58

Issue

6

Pagination

439 - 442

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Location

Oxford, England

ISSN

0962-7480

eISSN

1471-8405

Language

eng

Notes

Published online 18 June 2008Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society of Occupational Medicine

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2008, Oxford University Press

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