Abstract
Objective: Primary care staff faces a complex work environment including a heavy administrative work load and perceive some work tasks as illegitimate. This study aimed to elucidate associations between the perceived legitimacy of work tasks, the psychosocial work environment, and the utilization of work time among Swedish primary care staff.Design and setting: The study was designed as a multicenter study involving all staff categories, i.e. registered nurses, primary care physicians, care administrators, nurse assistants and allied professionals, at eleven primary care centers in Sweden.Subjects: Participants completed the Bern Illegitimate Tasks Scale and the Copenhagen Psychosocial Questionnaire. They also recorded time spent on all work tasks, day by day during two separate weeks.Main outcome measures and results: More than a quarter (27%) of primary care physicians perceived a high proportion of unnecessary work tasks. After adjusting for profession, age and gender, the perception of having to perform unreasonable work tasks was positively associated with experiencing role conflicts and with the proportion of organization-related administration and service work tasks.Conclusion: Across all staff groups, the perception of unreasonable work tasks was more pronounced among staff with a high proportion of non-patient related administration. Also, the perception of having to perform a large amount of illegitimate work tasks affected the psychosocial work environment negatively, which might influence staffs perception of their professional roles. These results illuminate the importance of decision makers to thoroughly consider the distribution and allocation of non-patient related work tasks among staff in primary care.Key pointsWe observed an interaction between perception of having a large proportion of illegitimate work tasks and impaired psychosocial work environment. • More than a quarter of the primary care physicians perceived a high proportion of unnecessary work tasks.• Across all staff groups, performing unreasonable work tasks was associated with an experience of having role conflicts.• Across all staff groups, a perception of performing unreasonable work tasks was associated with the proportion of non-patient related administrative work tasks.
Highlights
Efficient use of health care resources is as crucial as it is fundamental
More than a quarter (27%) of primary care physicians (PCPs) scored above the cut-off value for Bern Illegitimate Tasks Scale (BITS) regarding unnecessary work tasks, which was significantly more (p < .001) than the proportion observed in all other professions in the survey
We found a positive association between perceived role conflicts and scores above the cut-off for unreasonable work tasks; i.e. higher frequencies of perceived unreasonable work tasks were associated with higher frequencies of role conflicts, stress was significantly positively associated with the perception of unreasonable work tasks
Summary
Efficient use of health care resources is as crucial as it is fundamental. Primary health care tend to be a demanding, multifaceted work place. Osborn et al reported that, after the US, which is the only one of the ten countries studied without a national health system, Swedish primary care physicians (PCPs) were the most dissatisfied with the health care system. In Sweden, only 19% of PCPs stated that the system worked well; whereas 27% of ß 2019 The Author(s).
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