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Press Release for Health Rhythms™ Research
November 2003
LONG-TERM CARE
WORKERS FIND STRESS RELIEF IN MUSIC;
LANDMARK STUDY
COULD SAVE INDUSTRY $1.46 BILLION
MEADVILLE, PA—The
employee dissatisfaction, burnout and rampant
turnover that threaten one of America’s most
stress-prone industries—long-term care—may have a
solution in one of man’s oldest activities,
according to a new scientific study. Researchers
have found that a specific Recreational Music-making
(RMM) program drastically reduced employee burnout
and mood disturbances with huge projected economic
benefits for the long-term care industry.
“This is the first study to address the practical
human-resource applications of Recreational
Music-making in a specific and quantifiable manner—a
first in music, and a first in business,” said
neurologist Barry Bittman, MD, medical director of
the Mind-Body Wellness Center in Meadville, PA and
lead author of the study. “Employee turnover is
threatening the ultimate viability of the long-term
care industry. The impact of stress in the workplace
has incredible implications in other arenas as well.
What company in this day and age does not rank
stress among its leading problems?”
According
to data from more than 40 states, employee turnover
in the long-term care industry ranges between 40
percent and 100 percent annually. The study used 60
percent as a benchmark for its projections with
employee turnover amounting to about $8,100 per
person according to industry data.
Emotional burnout is considered a major factor in
this turnover rate. Industry surveys show that
emotional factors, rather than economic ones,
account for 81.7 percent of employees’ decisions to
stay or leave. Even among long-term care workers who
stay in their jobs, emotional burnout can detract
from the quality of the care they provide and even
heighten the risk of elder abuse.
The
turnover problem has particularly serious
implications for long-term care. Enrollment in
nursing and related training programs is down, while
the number of older Americans who will need care is
on the rise. Unlike other businesses that have the
option to combat employee turnover by increasing
salaries, long-term care facilities operate under
Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement caps that
ultimately constrain their wage scales.
“This
is not a minor issue ─ rather it’s a problem that’s
threatening the future of the long-term care
industry,” Bittman says. “This could be one of the
salvations of the industry.”
Recreational Music-making is distinct from “regular”
music making as its purpose is the enjoyment and
well-being of the participant and the group, not an
artistic or aesthetic outcome. Of particular
importance is the fact that participation does not
require talent or training. RMM can bridge
linguistic and cultural divides in ways that verbal
activities alone cannot. Indeed, the Merriam Webster
dictionary notes that the word “recreation” is
derived from the Latin root “recreatio,” meaning
“restoration to health.”
The
study’s protocol was based upon Group Empowerment
Drumming, coupled with exercises on a digital piano,
for 112 employees at Wesbury United Methodist
Retirement Community, which is home to 400 residents
in Meadville, PA. In addition to breathing, imagery
and movement components, participants used simple
percussion instruments to establish a sense of
camaraderie while expressing their feelings
non-verbally at first. Many discovered a refreshing
sense of group nurturing and support, coupled with
heightened interpersonal awareness and respect,
which prompted ongoing meaningful dialogues.
The
resulting improvement in affect was measured and
quantified using Total Mood Disturbance, a derived
composite index of several mood states that was
measured with written questionnaires before and
after participation in the experimental and control
groups.
An
independent consulting group, Tripp Umbach
Healthcare Consulting of Pittsburgh, PA, used survey
data from the national long-term care industry to
translate the study participants’ 46 percent
improvement in Total Mood Disturbance into a
projection that the RMM protocol could reduce
turnover by 18.3 percent, thereby saving 11
positions each year in a typical 100-bed facility.
Industry-wide data on human resources costs
indicated that this reduction in turnover would save
such a facility $89,100 per year, and would save the
entire long-term care industry $1.46 billion.
Notably, the actual improvement in employee turnover
at Wesbury exceeded the projections of the published
study.
Bittman commented that the application of
specifically-tailored RMM protocols could
potentially result in substantial cost savings for
many industries worldwide. He and his research team
are preparing to extend this research to build upon
the results of this study in a host of other arenas.
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