A systematic scoping review of health-promoting interventions for contact centre employees examined through a behaviour change wheel lens.

Journal: PloS one

Volume: 19

Issue: 3

Year of Publication: 2024

Affiliated Institutions:  Research Institute for Sport and Exercise Sciences, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, United Kingdom. Public Health Institute, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, United Kingdom. Division of Health Research, Lancaster University, Lancaster, Lancashire, United Kingdom.

Abstract summary 

Social determinants of health and poor working conditions contribute to excessive sickness absence and attrition in contact centre advisors. With no recent review conducted, the current scoping review is needed to investigate the volume, effectiveness, acceptability, and feasibility of health-promoting interventions for contact centre advisors. This will inform the adoption and implementation of evidence-based practice, and future research.Searches conducted across four databases (MEDLINE, PsycInfo, CINAHL, Web of Science) and reference checking in February 2023 identified health-promoting interventions for contact centre advisors. Extracted and coded data from eligible interventions were systematically synthesised using the nine intervention functions of the Behaviour Change Wheel and behaviour change technique taxonomy.This scoping review identified a low number of high quality and peer-reviewed health-promoting intervention studies for contact centre advisors (28 studies since 2002). Most interventions were conducted in high-income countries with office-based advisors, predominantly using environmental restructuring and training strategies to improve health. Most interventions reported positive effectiveness results for the primary intended outcomes, which were broadly organised into: i) health behaviours (sedentary behaviour, physical activity, smoking); ii) physical health outcomes (musculoskeletal health, visual health, vocal health, sick building syndrome); iii) mental health outcomes (stress, job control, job satisfaction, wellbeing). Few interventions evaluated acceptability and feasibility.There is little evidence on the effectiveness, acceptability, and feasibility of health-promoting interventions for contact centre advisors. Evidence is especially needed in low-to-middle income countries, and for remote/hybrid, nightshift, older and disabled advisors.

Authors & Co-authors:  Bell Porcellato Holland Morris Smith Haines Graves

Study Outcome 

Source Link: Visit source

Statistics
Citations :  Randle F. ‘Post Covid’ Recruitment Challenges facing Contact Centres in 2021. Cactus search. 2021 [cited 14 September 2023]. https://www.cactussearch.co.uk/about-us/clients/white-papers/current-challenges-customer-contact-recruitment-2021/#:~:text=There%20over%206000%20call%20centres,contact%20centre%20has%20127%20employees.
Authors :  7
Identifiers
Doi : e0298150
SSN : 1932-6203
Study Population
Male,Female
Mesh Terms
Humans
Other Terms
Study Design
Study Approach
Country of Study
Publication Country
United States