Research & Insights for Workplace Wellbeing

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Workplace-Based Organizational Interventions Promoting Mental Health and Happiness among Healthcare Workers: A Realist Review

Patricia Gray; Sipho Senabe; Nisha Naicker; Spo Kgalamono; Annalee Yassi; Jerry M. Spiegel

International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health

2019 November

DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16224396

MDPI (Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute)

Licence Label: CC BY 4.0

This review explores whether organisational-level workplace interventions can genuinely improve mental health and wellbeing among healthcare workers.

Looking across 55 unique studies (60 articles), the authors examined interventions delivered at organisational level, not individual resilience training, including leadership development, workload changes, team communication initiatives, stress management programmes and participatory redesign approaches.  Some studies reported improvements in burnout, stress or job satisfaction. Others found partial, short-term, or no measurable change. What stands out is not one “silver bullet” intervention, but the importance of context. Interventions were more likely to show benefit when staff were actively involved, leadership was supportive, and expectations were realistic.

The overall picture is mixed: organisational interventions can help, however impact depends heavily on how they are designed, implemented and sustained.

Organisational change is complex, and this paper reinforces that reality.

  • It moves the conversation beyond individual resilience and toward system-level responsibility

  • It shows staff engagement is not optional, it is central to success

  • It highlights that process and implementation can influence outcomes as much as the intervention itself

  • It demonstrates that short-term improvements do not always translate into long-term change

  • It reminds leaders that culture, expectations and context shape impact

For HR leaders and wellbeing providers, this reinforces a critical message: workplace mental health is not solved through standalone initiatives. Sustainable improvement requires organisational commitment, participation, and continuous attention.

© 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. The original work remains the intellectual property of the authors and publisher. Commentary by The Well Crowd. © The Well Crowd Ltd. 2026. All rights reserved. This content provides a summary and independent commentary on the original research and does not reproduce the original publication. It is intended for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional or medical advice. No part of this content may be reproduced or distributed without prior written permission.

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