BMJ Open (Jun 2024)

Utility of an online well-being assessment in targeting employee well-being programmes: a cross-sectional survey study in Finland

  • Katri Korpela,
  • Paulus Torkki,
  • Krista Kauppi,
  • Patrik Borg,
  • Eira Roos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-079708
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 6

Abstract

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Objectives Occupational health challenges are changing, emphasising the need for a more comprehensive approach. This study examines how a subjective well-being assessment can be used to identify target groups for work well-being interventions and brings insight into how survey-based well-being evaluations are linked to clinical health indicators (ie, anthropometric measurements and blood tests).Design A cross-sectional survey study using results from the Virta1 randomised controlled trial and a third-party well-being questionnaire database.Setting and participants Online well-being survey data from 2990 respondents was used to identify target groups for work well-being interventions and clinical health indicator data from 713 respondents was used to examine how subjective evaluations are linked to physical health.Results We identified five groups of employees with different well-being challenges and presenteeism levels: Good well-being, Hard on oneself, Lifestyle challenges, Recovery challenges and Multiple challenges. The subjective evaluations correlated with clinical health indicators, showing that the well-being groups differed significantly in their average clinical health profiles. Especially people in the Multiple challenges group had multiple physical health challenges, while people in the Good well-being and Hard on oneself groups did not.Conclusions Our results show that a subjective well-being assessment can identify different groups with distinct characteristics and health risks and that subjective evaluations of well-being correlate strongly with physical health. Online well-being assessment offers potentially a cost-effective way for occupational health providers to screen large populations to target physical health examinations to groups that need them the most and simultaneously get a better understanding of their well-being needs.