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Development and fidelity testing of the testand#64;Work digital toolkit for employers on workplace health checks and opt-in HIV testing
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Journal of Health & Medical Informatics

ISSN: 2157-7420

Open Access

Development and fidelity testing of the test@Work digital toolkit for employers on workplace health checks and opt-in HIV testing


3rd International Conference on Digital Health

March 18, 2021 Webinar

Sarah Somerset

School of Health Sciences, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom

Scientific Tracks Abstracts: J Health Med Informat

Abstract :

Background: In the UK, few employers offer general health checks for employees, and opt-in HIV testing is rarely included. There is a need to provide evidence-based guidance and support for employers around health checks and HIV testing in the workplace. An agile approach was used to develop and evaluate a digital toolkit to facilitate employers' understanding about workplace health screening. Methods: The Test@Work toolkit development included an online survey (STAGE 1: n = 201), stakeholder consultation (STAGE 2: n = 19), expert peer review (STAGE 3: n = 24), and pilot testing (STAGE 4: n = 20). The toolkit includes employer guidance on workplace health promotion, workplace health screening, and confidential opt-in HIV testing with signposting to resources. The pilot testing included assessment of fidelity (delivery and engagement) and implementation qualities (attitudes, resources, practicality, acceptability, usability and cost). Results: STAGE 1: The vast majority of respondents would consider offering general health checks in the workplace that included confidential opt-in HIV testing, and this view was broadly comparable across organisation types (n = 201; public: 87.8%; private: 89.7%; third: 87.1%). STAGES 2 and 3: Stakeholders highlighted essential content considerations: (1) inclusion of the business case for workplace health initiatives, (2) clear pathways to employer responsibilities, and (3) presenting HIV-related information alongside other areas of health. With regards presentation, stakeholders proposed that the toolkit should be concise, with clear signposting and be hosted on a trusted portal. STAGE 4: Employers were satisfied with the toolkit content, usability and utility. The toolkit had high fidelity with regards to delivery and employer engagement. Assessment of implementation qualities showed high usability and practicality, with low perceived burden for completion and acceptable cost implications. Very few resource challenges were reported, and the toolkit was considered to be appropriate for any type of organisation, irrespective of size or resources.

Biography :

Sarah Somerset is a Health Researcher at the University of Nottingham, UK. She has research interests in: workplace health and wellbeing, children’s participation in sport, health promotion. She has expertise in qualitative research including: conducting focus groups, collating and analysing data, conducting interviews, face to face, telephone, email, collating and analysing data, using thematic analysis, use of NVIVO, hearing research, sports participation and barriers for deaf children.

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Citations: 2128

Journal of Health & Medical Informatics received 2128 citations as per Google Scholar report

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