Franche Renée L, Murray Eleanor J, Ostry Aleck, Ratner Pamela A, Wagner Shannon L, Harder Henry G
Occupational Health and Safety Agency for Healthcare, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Rural Remote Health. 2010 Oct-Dec;10(4):1502. Epub 2010 Oct 16.
Approximately 20% of healthcare workers in high-income countries such as Australia, Canada and the USA work in rural areas. Healthcare workers are known to be vulnerable to occupational injury and poor work disability outcomes; given their rural-urban distribution, it is possible to compare work disability prevention in rural and urban areas. However, little attention has been paid to work disability prevention issues specific to rural workers, including rural healthcare workers. A comprehensive review of the literature was conducted to identify rural-urban differences in work disability outcomes (defined as the incidence of occupational injury and the duration of associated work absence), as well as risk factors for poor work disability outcomes in rural healthcare workers.
The databases MEDLINE, CINAHL, and EMBASE were searched, as were relevant research centers and government agencies, to identify all quantitative and qualitative English-language studies published between 1 January 2000 and 6 October 2009 that discussed occupational injury, work absence duration, work disability management, or risk factors for poor work disability outcomes, for rural workers specifically, or in comparison with urban workers. To ensure inclusion of studies of healthcare workers as a distinct group among other sector-specific groups, a broad search for literature related to all industrial sectors was conducted.
Of 860 references identified, 5 discussed work disability outcomes and 25 discussed known risk factors. Known risk factors were defined as factors firmly established to be associated with poor work disability outcomes in the general worker population based on systematic reviews, well-established conceptual models of work disability prevention, and public health literature. Although somewhat conflicting, the evidence suggests that rural healthcare workers experience higher rates of occupational injury compared with urban healthcare workers, within occupational categories. Rural workers also appear to be more vulnerable to prolonged work absence although the data are limited. No studies directly compared risk factors for work disability prevention outcomes between rural and urban healthcare workers. However, potential risk factors were identified at the level of the environment, worker, job, organization, worker compensation system and healthcare access. Important methodological limitations were noted, including unclear definitions of rurality, inadequate methods of urban-rural comparisons such as comparing samples from different countries, and a paucity of studies applying longitudinal or multivariate designs.
There is a notable lack of evidence about work disability prevention issues for healthcare workers in rural areas. Available evidence supports the hypothesis that rural healthcare workers are vulnerable to occupational injury, and suggests they are vulnerable to prolonged work absence. They may be particularly vulnerable to poor work disability prevention outcomes due to complex patient needs in the context of risk factors such as heavy workloads, long hours, heavy on-call demands, high stress levels, limited support and workplace violence. Additional vulnerability may occur because their work conditions are managed in distant urban administrative centers, and due to barriers in their own healthcare access. Although rural healthcare workers seem generally at greater risk of injury, one study suggests that urban emergency medical service workers experience a high vulnerability to injury that may outweigh the effects of rurality. Additional research is needed to document rural-urban disparities in work disability outcomes and to identify associated sources and risk factors. Other issues to address are access to and quality of healthcare for rural healthcare workers, streamlining the compensation system, the unique needs of Aboriginal healthcare workers, and the management of prolonged work absence. Finally, occupational injury and work absence duration programs should be tailored to meet the needs of rural workers.
在澳大利亚、加拿大和美国等高收入国家,约20%的医护人员在农村地区工作。众所周知,医护人员易遭受职业伤害且工作残疾结局不佳;鉴于其城乡分布情况,有可能对农村和城市地区的工作残疾预防进行比较。然而,针对农村劳动者,包括农村医护人员的工作残疾预防问题却很少受到关注。我们对文献进行了全面综述,以确定城乡在工作残疾结局(定义为职业伤害发生率及相关缺勤时长)方面的差异,以及农村医护人员工作残疾结局不佳的风险因素。
检索了MEDLINE、CINAHL和EMBASE数据库,以及相关研究中心和政府机构,以识别2000年1月1日至2009年10月6日期间发表的所有讨论职业伤害、缺勤时长、工作残疾管理或工作残疾结局不佳风险因素的定量和定性英文研究,这些研究专门针对农村劳动者,或与城市劳动者进行比较。为确保将医护人员作为一个独特群体纳入其他特定行业群体的研究中,我们广泛检索了与所有工业部门相关的文献。
在识别出的860篇参考文献中,5篇讨论了工作残疾结局,25篇讨论了已知风险因素。已知风险因素被定义为基于系统综述、完善的工作残疾预防概念模型和公共卫生文献,在一般劳动者群体中已确定与工作残疾结局不佳相关的因素。尽管证据有些相互矛盾,但表明在职业类别中,农村医护人员比城市医护人员遭受职业伤害的发生率更高。农村劳动者似乎也更容易出现长期缺勤,尽管数据有限。没有研究直接比较农村和城市医护人员工作残疾预防结局的风险因素。然而,在环境、劳动者、工作、组织、劳动者补偿系统和医疗服务可及性层面识别出了潜在风险因素。注意到了重要的方法学局限性,包括农村地区定义不明确、城乡比较方法不充分(如比较来自不同国家的样本),以及应用纵向或多变量设计的研究匮乏。
关于农村地区医护人员工作残疾预防问题,明显缺乏证据。现有证据支持农村医护人员易遭受职业伤害这一假设,并表明他们易出现长期缺勤。由于在诸如工作量大、工作时间长、随叫随到需求高、压力水平高、支持有限和工作场所暴力等风险因素背景下患者需求复杂,他们可能尤其易出现工作残疾预防结局不佳的情况。额外的脆弱性可能因他们的工作条件由遥远的城市行政中心管理,以及自身医疗服务可及性存在障碍而产生。尽管农村医护人员似乎总体上面临更大的受伤风险,但一项研究表明城市紧急医疗服务人员受伤的脆弱性可能超过农村因素的影响。需要进一步研究来记录工作残疾结局方面的城乡差异,并识别相关来源和风险因素。其他需要解决的问题包括农村医护人员的医疗服务可及性和质量、简化补偿系统、原住民医护人员的独特需求,以及长期缺勤的管理。最后,职业伤害和缺勤时长项目应量身定制以满足农村劳动者的需求。