@inbook {1425704, title = {The Work, Family, and Health Network Organizational Intervention: Core Elements and Customization for Diverse Occupational Health Contexts}, booktitle = {Occupational Health Disparities: Improving the Well-Being of Ethnic and Racial Minority Workers}, year = {2017}, pages = {181-215}, publisher = {American Psychological Association}, organization = {American Psychological Association}, address = {Washington, DC}, url = {https://www.apa.org/pubs/books/4318145?tab=2}, author = {Kossek, Ellen E and Wipfli, Brad and Thompson, Rebecca A and Brockwood, K} } @article {87206, title = {Costs of a Work-Family Intervention: Evidence From the Work, Family, and Health Network.}, journal = {Am J Health Promot.}, volume = {Aug 23}, year = {2013}, pages = {[Epub ahead of print]}, abstract = { Purpose . To estimate the cost to the workplace of implementing initiatives to reduce work-family conflict. Design . Prospective cost analysis conducted alongside a group-randomized multisite controlled experimental study, using a microcosting approach. Setting . An information technology firm. Subjects . Employees (n = 1004) and managers (n = 141) randomized to the intervention arm. Intervention . STAR (Start. Transform. Achieve. Results.) to enhance employees{\textquoteright} control over their work time, increase supervisor support for employees to manage work and family responsibilities, and reorient the culture toward results. Measures . A taxonomy of activities related to customization, start-up, and implementation was developed. Resource use and unit costs were estimated for each activity, excluding research-related activities. Analysis . Economic costing approach (accounting and opportunity costs). Sensitivity analyses on intervention costs. Results . The total cost of STAR was $709,654, of which $389,717 was labor costs and $319,937 nonlabor costs (including $313,877 for intervention contract). The cost per employee participation in the intervention was $340 (95\% confidence interval: $330-$351); $597 ($561-$634) for managers and $300 ($292-$308) for other employees (2011 prices). Conclusion . A detailed activity costing approach allows for more accurate cost estimates and identifies key drivers of cost. The key cost driver was employees{\textquoteright} time spent on receiving the intervention. Ignoring this cost, which is usual in studies that cost workplace interventions, would seriously underestimate the cost of a workplace initiative. }, url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=23971520}, author = {Barbosa, C and Bray, Jeremy W and Brockwood, K and Reeves, D} }