Stakeholders' perspectives about and priorities for economic evaluation of health and safety programs in healthcare

Publication type
Journal article
Authors
Tompa E, de Boer H, Macdonald S, Alamgir H, Koehoorn M, Guzman J
Date published
2016 Apr 01
Journal
Workplace Health & Safety
Volume
64
Issue
4
Pages
163-174
Open Access?
No
Abstract

This study identified and prioritized resources and outcomes that should be considered in more comprehensive and scientifically rigorous health and safety economic evaluations according to healthcare sector stakeholders. A literature review and stakeholder interviews identified candidate resources and outcomes and then a Delphi panel ranked them. According to the panel, the top five resources were (a) health and safety staff time; (b) training workers; (c) program planning, promotion, and evaluation costs; (d) equipment purchases and upgrades; and (e) administration costs. The top five outcomes were (a) number of injuries, illnesses, and general sickness absences; (b) safety climate; (c) days lost due to injuries, illnesses, and general sickness absences; (d) job satisfaction and engagement; and (e) quality of care and patient safety. These findings emphasize stakeholders' stated priorities and are useful as a benchmark for assessing the quality of health and safety economic evaluations and the comprehensiveness of these findings