Effectiveness of Physical Activity-Led Workplace Health Promotion Interventions: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Literature Search
2.2. Eligibility Criteria
2.3. Data Extraction
2.4. Success Rate Definition
- (1)
- Statistical significance: determined based on the p-values reported in each study.
- (2)
- Clinical relevance: for clinical health indicators (e.g., blood pressure and blood glucose), the degree of improvement had to meet the minimal clinically important difference (MCID) recommended by clinical guidelines.
- (3)
- Handling of mixed results: if some indicators within a given health domain showed improvement while others remained unchanged in the same study, it was still considered a partial success for that domain.
2.5. Risk-of-Bias Assessment
Author/Year | N | Occupation or Company Type | Objective | Intervention Duration | Intervention Type | Outcome Type | Risk of Bias |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gerstel et al. 2013 [21] | 129 | Employees of a nursing agency | Metabolic syndrome | 48 weeks | PA Intervention and Health Education Intervention (obesity, PA, diet) | Clinical Health Outcomes, Body Composition, PA, and Diet and Nutrition | M |
Andersen et al. 2013 [22] | 160 | Programmers | Insufficient PA | 9 weeks | PA Intervention and Health Education Intervention | Clinical Health Outcomes, Body Composition, and PA | M |
Christensen et al. 2013 [23] | 144 | Employees of a nursing agency | Improve work efficiency | 12 weeks | PA Intervention, Dietary Intervention (restricted diet), and Health Education Intervention (diet) | Attendance Rate, Absenteeism Rate, and Work-Related or Organizational Outcomes (Productivity) | M |
Gussenhoven et al. 2013 [24] | 1288 | Programmer, hospital, and insurance company | Obesity | 24 weeks | Health Education Intervention (PA and diet) | Work-Related (Absenteeism Rate, GLPD, and NLPD) | H |
Weinhold et al. 2015 [25] | 69 | University lecturer | Diabetes | 16 weeks | PA Intervention, Dietary Intervention, and Health Education Intervention | Clinical Health Outcomes, Body Composition, PA, and Diet and Nutrition | L |
Mitchell et al.2015 [26] | 300 | Farm grower | Obesity | 12 weeks | Health Education Intervention (PA) | Clinical Health Outcomes, Body Composition, PA, and Diet and Nutrition | M |
Miller et al. 2015 [27] | 70 | University worksite among employees | Diabetes | 16 weeks | PA Intervention and Health Education Intervention | Clinical Health Outcomes, Diet and Nutrition, PA, and Work-Related Indicators | M |
Audrey et al. 2015 [28] | 84 | Office workers | Insufficient PA | 8 weeks | PA Intervention and Health Education Intervention (PA) | PA and Work-Related Indicators | M |
Solenhill et al. 2016 [29] | 3876 | Employees in the transport services | Improve lifestyle habits | 36 weeks | Health Education Intervention (PA and diet) | Body Composition, PA, Diet and Nutrition, and Sleep Quality | M |
Gregoski et al. 2016 [30] | 54 | Bank employees | Obesity | 10 weeks | PA Intervention and Health Education Intervention (PA and diet) | Body Composition, PA, Diet and Nutrition, Sleep Habits, and Work-Related Indicators | H |
Chandrasiri et al. 2016 [31] | 81 | Administrative office staff | Non-communicable diseases | 12 weeks | Health Education Intervention (PA, diet, smoking cessation) | Clinical Health Outcomes and Body Composition | H |
Hendriksen et al. 2016 [32] | 502 | Insurance company | Improve lifestyle habits | 40 weeks | Health Education Intervention (PA mainly) | Clinical Health Outcomes, Body Composition, and Work-Related Indicators | H |
Jamal et al. 2016 [33] | 194 | University lecturer | Obesity | 12 weeks | Health Education Intervention (PA and diet) | Clinical Health Outcomes, Body Composition, PA, Diet and Nutrition, Depression and Anxiety, and Self-Efficacy | M |
Balk-Moller et al. 2017 [34] | 566 | The Social Welfare and Health Care Sector | Obesity | 38 weeks | Health Education Intervention (PA and diet) | Clinical Health Outcomes and Body Composition | H |
Maylor et al. 2018 [35] | 89 | Office workers | Insufficient PA | 8 weeks | PA Intervention and Health Education Intervention (PA, chronic disease) | Clinical Health Outcomes, Body Composition and PA | H |
Viester et al. 2018 [36] | 314 | Construction workers | Overweight | 24 weeks | Health Education Intervention (PA and diet) | Clinical Health Outcomes, Body Composition, PA, and Diet and Nutrition | M |
Ing et al. 2018 [37] | 217 | The Social Welfare and Health Care Sector and academic institutions | Obesity | 36 weeks | Health Education Intervention | Clinical Health Outcomes, Body Composition, PA and Physical Fitness, Diet and Nutrition, and Self-Efficacy | M |
Kouwenhoven-Pasmooij et al. 2018 [38] | 491 | Police and hospital | Cardiovascular disease | 24 weeks | Health Education Intervention (lifestyle education) | Clinical Health Outcomes, Body Composition, PA, Diet and Nutrition, and Work-Related Indicators | M |
Oftedal et al. 2019 [39] | 40 | Shift workers | Improve lifestyle habits | 4 weeks | Health Education Intervention (PA, diet, sleep) | Clinical Health Outcomes, Body Composition, PA, Diet and Nutrition, Sleep Quality, and Work-Related Indicators | M |
Fang et al. 2019 [40] | 98 | High-tech industries | Obesity | 12 weeks | PA Intervention | Clinical Health Outcomes, Body Composition, PA and Physical Fitness, Stress, and Work-Related Indicators | H |
Edman et al. 2019 [41] | 54 | Healthcare system employees | Cardiovascular disease | 12 weeks | Health Education Intervention (PA, diet, stress management) | Body Composition, PA, Stress, Depression, and Sleep Habits | H |
Haufe et al. 2019 [42] | 314 | Automobile factory workers | Metabolic syndrome | 24 weeks | PA Intervention | Clinical Health Outcomes, PA and Physical Fitness, Diet and Nutrition, Depression and Anxiety, and Work-Related Indicators | L |
Stein et al. 2019 [43] | 1000 | Healthcare system employees and university worksite among employees | Obesity | 96 weeks | Health Education Intervention | PA | M |
Bonn et al. 2019 [44] | 209 | White-collar office employees | Improve lifestyle habits | 12 weeks | PA Intervention and Health Education Intervention | Clinical Health Outcomes, Body Composition, PA, Diet and Nutrition, Sleep Quality, and Psychological Health Outcomes | M |
Sareban et al. 2020 [45] | 73 | Hospital staff | Cardiovascular disease | 48 weeks | PA Intervention | Clinical Health Outcomes, Body Composition, and PA | M |
Linnan et al. 2020 [46] | 553 | Child care center | Improve lifestyle habits | 24 weeks | Health Education Intervention | PA | M |
Piao et al. 2020 [47] | 121 | Office workers | Insufficient PA | 12 weeks | PA Intervention and Health Education Intervention (PA) | Sleep Quality and Habits | M |
Reich et al. 2020 [48] | 66 | Doctor | Cardiovascular disease | 48 weeks | PA Intervention | Clinical Health Outcomes, Body composition, PA and Physical Fitness | M |
Haufe et al. 2021 [49] | 314 | Automobile factory workers | Metabolic syndrome | 24 weeks | PA Intervention, Dietary Intervention, and Health Education Intervention (PA) | Clinical Health Outcomes, Body Composition, PA and Physical Fitness, Depression and Anxiety, and Work-Related Indicators | M |
Neshteruk et al. 2021 [50] | 250 | Child care center | Insufficient PA | 24 weeks | PA Intervention and Health Education Intervention (PA) | PA | M |
Mamede et al. 2021 [51] | 298 | Administrative office staff | Insufficient PA | 10 weeks | PA Intervention and Health Education Intervention | Clinical Health Outcomes, Body Composition, PA, and Work-Related Indicators | H |
Noori et al. 2021 [52] | 80 | Fruit factory workers | Improve lifestyle habits | 8 weeks | Health Education Intervention (PA, diet, mental health) | Clinical Health Outcomes, Body Composition, PA, Diet and Nutrition, Sleep Habits, Stress, and Work-Related Indicators | H |
Stephenson et al. 2021 [53] | 56 | Office workers | Insufficient PA | 8 weeks | PA Intervention and Health Education Intervention | Clinical Health Outcomes, Body Composition, PA, Diet and Nutrition, Psychological Health Outcomes, and Work-Related Indicators | L |
Garcia Perez de Sevilla et al. 2021 [54] | 24 | University employees | Improve lifestyle habits | 18 weeks | PA Intervention, Dietary Intervention, and Health Education Intervention (PA, diet) | Clinical Health Outcomes, PA, Diet and Nutrition, and Psychological Health Outcomes | M |
Kong et al. 2022 [55] | 955 | Office workers | Obesity | 48 weeks | PA Intervention, Dietary Intervention, and Health Education Intervention (PA, diet) | Body Composition, PA, Diet and Nutrition, and Self-Efficacy | M |
Shiri et al. 2022 [56] | 159 | Healthcare system employees | Improve lifestyle habits | 8 weeks | PA Intervention, Dietary Intervention, and Health Education Intervention (PA, diet) | Depression and Anxiety, Sleep Habits, and Work-Related Indicators | M |
Bayerle et al. 2022 [57] | 129 | Automobile factory workers | Metabolic syndrome | 24 weeks | PA Intervention and Health Education Intervention (PA) | Clinical Health Outcomes, Body Composition, PA, Depression, and Work-Related Indicators | M |
Edwardson et al. 2022 [58] | 756 | Office workers | Insufficient PA | 12 weeks | PA Intervention and Health Education Intervention (PA) | Clinical Health Outcomes, Body Composition, PA, Diet and Nutrition, Sleep Quality, Stress, Anxiety, and Work-Related Indicators | H |
Silva et al. 2022 [59] | 31 | Office workers | Insufficient PA | 16 weeks | PA Intervention | Clinical Health Outcomes, Body Composition, PA and Physical Fitness, Diet and Nutrition, and Stress | L |
Brinkmann et al. 2023 [60] | 206 | Automobile factory workers | Diabetes | 15 weeks | PA Intervention, Dietary Intervention, Health Education Intervention, and Smoking Cessation | Clinical Health Outcomes and Body Composition | H |
3. Results
3.1. Study Selection
3.2. Characteristics of the Samples
3.3. Characteristics of the Interventions
3.3.1. Educational Interventions
3.3.2. Physical Activity Interventions
3.3.3. Dietary Interventions
3.3.4. Other Intervention Types
3.4. Measures Used
3.4.1. Clinical Health Outcomes
3.4.2. Body Composition
3.4.3. Diet and Nutrition
3.4.4. Physical Activity and Function
3.4.5. Sleep Habits and Quality
3.4.6. Psychological Health Outcomes
3.4.7. Work-Related or Organizational Outcomes
3.5. Overall Effects of the Interventions
3.5.1. Clinical Health Outcomes
3.5.2. Body Composition
3.5.3. Diet and Nutrition
3.5.4. Physical Activity and Function
3.5.5. Sleep Habits and Quality
3.5.6. Psychological Health Outcomes
3.5.7. Work-Related or Organizational Outcomes
3.6. Success Rate of the Interventions
3.7. Risk-of-Bias Results
4. Discussion
4.1. Summary of the Characteristics of the Studies
4.2. Successfulness of Interventions
4.2.1. Clinical Health Outcomes
4.2.2. Body Composition
4.2.3. Diet and Nutrition
4.2.4. Physical Activity
4.2.5. Mental Health and Self-Efficacy
4.2.6. Work-Related Outcomes
4.2.7. Sleep Quality
4.3. Risk-of-Bias Results
4.4. Study Limitations and Prospects
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
PAWHI | Physical activity-led workplace health interventions |
PA | Physical activity |
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MeSH | Entry Terms |
---|---|
Term #1: Physical Activity | Physical Activities; Exercise; Exercises; Physical Exercise; Physical Exercises; Acute Exercise; Acute Exercises; Aerobic Exercise; Aerobic Exercises; Isometric Exercise; Isometric Exercises; Exercise Training; Exercise Trainings |
Term #2: Occupational Group | Occupational Groups; Employee; Employees; Personnel; Worker; Workers |
Term #3: Workplace | Job Site; Job Sites; Work Location; Work Locations; Worksite; Worksites; Work Place; Work Places; Work-Site; Work Site; Work-Sites |
PICOS | Inclusion | Exclusion |
---|---|---|
Population | (1) Currently employed individuals; (2) Employees with suboptimal work habits, such as prolonged sitting, insufficient PA, high work-related stress, or physically demanding labor; (3) Adults aged 18–65 years. | (1) Non-employed individuals; (2) Special occupational groups (e.g., professional athletes and military personnel), with findings not generalizable to general workplace populations. |
Intervention | (1) Workplace interventions primarily centered on PA; (2) Intervention themes may address the following: improvement of health risk factors, including overweight/obesity, dietary issues, insufficient PA, sleep problems, or tobacco/alcohol use; alleviation of disease symptoms, such as type 2 diabetes, hypertension, stroke, chronic heart disease, cancer, etc.; reduction in psychological distress, depression, anxiety, and other negative emotional states, with an enhancement in overall well-being; improvement in productivity, organizational performance, and reduction in absenteeism. | (1) Non-PA-led interventions; (2) Poorly described PA interventions (e.g., vague references to “exercise” without details on frequency, intensity, or type); (3) Intervention duration <4 weeks; (4) Interventions implemented in non-workplace settings (e.g., community and home). |
Comparison | (1) Control groups receiving either no intervention or non-PA interventions; (2) No significant differences between intervention and control groups at baseline. | (1) Lack of a control group or mismatched control designs; (2) Significant baseline differences between intervention and control groups. |
Outcom | Studies must include at least one of the following outcome categories: (1) Clinical health outcomes: blood pressure, heart rate, electrocardiogram measurements, blood biomarkers (e.g., glucose, lipids), incidence rates, and pain or disease status assessments; (2) Body composition outcomes: weight, BMI, waist circumference, other anthropometric measurements; (3) PA levels; (4) Physical function: muscular strength, aerobic endurance, joint mobility, etc.; (5) Sleep quality and habits; (6) Dietary behavior outcomes; (7) Psychological health: stress, anxiety, depression, burnout, self-efficacy measures; (8) Work-related outcomes. | (1) Absence of baseline or endpoint data; (2) Failed to report core outcomes related to PA or health (for example, only focusing on economic indicators). |
Study Design | Randomized controlled trials. | Non-randomized designs, including observational studies, case reports, or narrative/systematic reviews. |
Author/Year | Significantly Improved Outcome Measures After the Intervention (p < 0.05) |
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Gerstel et al. 2013 [21] | Clinical health outcomes: SBP, LDL-C, total C/HDL-C, HDL-C, fasting glucose, and mental component score of SF-36; body composition: body weight, BMI, and fat mass; diet and nutrition: total caloric intake (kcal/d); physical activity and function: low-intensity physical activity |
Andersen et al. 2013 [22] | Clinical health outcomes: SBP and DBP; body composition: weight, BMI, and body fat percentage; physical activity and function: aerobic fitness (mL/min/kg) |
Christensen et al. 2013 [23] | Clinical health outcomes: WHOQOL-BREF; work-related or organizational outcomes: productivity |
Gussenhoven et al. 2013 [24] | Level of physical activity |
Weinhold et al. 2015 [25] | Clinical health outcomes: FBG; body composition: body weight; diet and nutrition: the intake of dietary fiber and fats; level of physical activity |
Mitchell et al. 2015 [26] | Body composition: weight, BMI, and waist; diet and nutrition: water, fruit and vegetable, and fiber increase; physical activity and function: physical activity-non-work 30 min, moderate activity |
Miller et al. 2015 [27] | Body composition: body weight; diet and nutrition: intake of fruits, meat, fish, poultry, nuts, and seeds; physical activity and function: step counts; psychological health outcomes: self-efficacy, goal difficulty, and satisfaction with physical fitness, social support, and problem orientation (positive orientation); work-related or organizational outcomes: employee presenteeism |
Audrey et al. 2015 [28] | Physical activity and function: daily minutes of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) and overall physical activity |
Solenhill et al. 2016 [29] | Diet and nutrition: days of eating breakfast and sugar intake; physical activity and function: days of physical activity per week |
Gregoski et al. 2016 [30] | Body composition: weight; work-related or organizational outcomes: attendance rates |
Chandrasiri et al. 2016 [31] | Diet and nutrition: consumption of fresh fruits and vegetables; physical activity and function: physical inactivity |
Hendriksen et al. 2016 [32] | Clinical health outcomes: SBP; diet and nutrition: fruit and vegetable consumption; physical activity and function: MVPA and sedentary behavior |
Jamal et al. 2016 [33] | Clinical health outcomes: quality of life (WHOQOLBREF); body composition: weight, BMI, waist circumference, hip circumference; psychological health outcomes: perceived social support from friend (MDPSS), self-efficacy in weight management (WEL); diet and nutrition: intake of carbohydrates; physical activity: level of physical activity |
Balk-Moller et al. 2017 [34] | Body composition: body weight, body fat percentage, and waist circumference |
Maylor et al. 2018 [35] | Clinical health outcomes: SBP; and body composition: waist circumference and fat-free mass; physical activity and function: total steps |
Viester et al. 2018 [36] | Body composition: body weight, BMI, and waist circumference; diet and nutrition: sugar-sweetened beverages; physical activity and function: MVPA (SQUASH) |
Ing et al. 2018 [37] | Clinical health outcomes: SBP; body composition: weight; physical activity and function: the 6 min walk test (6MWT) and exercise frequency (physical activity questionnaire) |
Kouwenhoven-Pasmooij et al. 2018 [38] | Clinical health outcomes: mental component score of SF-36; body composition: body weight and BMI; productivity and physical activity |
Oftedal et al. 2019 [39] | Diet and nutrition: Australian Recommended Food Score (ARFS); physical activity and function, and the proportion of participants meeting physical activity guidelines |
Fang et al. 2019 [40] | Clinical health outcomes: total cholesterol, triglyceride, LDL-C, HDL-C, WHOQOL-BREF (physical health, psychological health, social relationships, environment, overall QOL); body composition: weight, BMI, waist circumference, body fat percentage, number of MS risk factors; physical activity and function: flexibility, muscular strength, and endurance, cardiorespiratory endurance; work-related or organizational outcomes: work control, interpersonal relationship at work, global job satisfaction; psychological health outcomes: occupational work stress |
Edman et al. 2019 [41] | Clinical health outcomes: self-reported symptoms (GI symptoms, headaches or migraines, fatigue, hemoglobin A1c, and blood pressure medication); body composition: weight; physical activity and function: aerobic and strengthening exercises (sessions/week); psychological health outcomes: perceived stress |
Haufe et al. 2019 [42] | Clinical health outcomes: metabolic syndrome Z score, SBP, triglycerides, fasting glucose concentration, mental component score of SF-36; body composition: waist circumference, body weight, body fat percentage; physical activity and function: exercise capacity (peak power output): psychological health outcomes: anxiety and depression severity (HADS); work-related or organizational outcomes: Work Ability Index score (WAI); diet and nutrition: dietary quality scores |
Stein et al. 2019 [43] | Physical activity and function: level of physical activity |
Bonn et al. 2019 [44] | Physical activity: daily exercise activity time |
Sareban et al. 2020 [45] | Clinical health outcomes: HbA1c, LDL-cholesterol; physical activity and function: commuting habits |
Linnan et al. 2020 [46] | Diet and nutrition: dietary intake: fruits and vegetables (times/day), sugar-sweetened beverages (times/day), fast food/eating out (times/day), eating habits score (times/day); physical activity and function: level of physical activity, muscle-strengthening activities (times/week); sleep habits and quality: hours per night |
Piao et al. 2020 [47] | Physical activity and function: the level of physical activity and change in Self-Report Habit Index (SRHI) |
Reich et al. 2020 [48] | Clinical health outcomes: SBP, mental component score of SF-36; physical activity and function: exercise capacity (Pmax), walking (km), and cycling (km) |
Haufe et al. 2021 [49] | Clinical health outcomes: alanine aminotransferase (ALT), aspartate aminotransferase (AST): alkaline phosphatase (AP), gamma-glutamyl transferase (gGT), fibrosis scores (APRI score); body composition: weight; physical activity and function: maximum power output during incremental exercise testing |
Neshteruk et al. 2021 [50] | Physical activity and function: level of physical activity |
Mamede et al. 2021 [51] | Physical activity and function: daily steps |
Noori et al. 2021 [52] | Diet and nutrition: dietary quality scores; physical activity and function; psychological health outcomes: stress management, spiritual growth, interpersonal relations, health responsibility, total HPLP-II score |
Stephenson et al. 2021 [53] | Physical activity and function: sedentary behavior |
Garcia Perez de Sevilla et al. 2021 [54] | Clinical health outcomes health-related quality of life (SF-36); diet and nutrition: dietary quality scores; physical activity and function: daily sitting time (GPAQ) |
Kong et al. 2022 [55] | Body composition: BMI, hip circumference, waist-to-height ratio; diet and nutrition: frequency of sweetened beverage, frequency of fruit intake, and frequency of vegetable intake; physical activity and function: daily steps |
Shiri et al. 2022 [56] | Body composition: BMI; psychological health outcomes: the risk of depressive symptoms; sleep habits and quality: hours per night; work-related or organizational outcomes: work ability |
Bayerle et al. 2022 [57] | Clinical health outcomes: SBP; body composition: body weight (kg), BMI (kg/m2), fat mass (kg), body fat (%), and relative exercise capacity Physical activity and function: total PA (MET × h/week) and everyday activity (MET × h/week); Psychological health outcomes: depression severity (HADS-D depression subscale); work-related or organizational outcomes: Work Ability Index (WAI) |
Edwardson et al. 2022 [58] | Clinical health outcomes: biochemical; physical activity and function: daily sitting time; psychological health outcomes: Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) |
Silva et al. 2022 [59] | Clinical health outcomes: WHOQOL-BREF (physical health domain, psychological health domain, environmental health domain); body composition: waist circumference, hip circumference, waist-to-height ratio (WHtR); physical activity and function: moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) |
Brinkmann et al. 2023 [60] | Clinical health outcomes: HbA1c, total cholesterol, LDL, triglycerides, SBP, DBP; body composition: body weight, BMI, waist circumference; physical activity and function: exercise capacity |
Outcome | No. of Studies Reporting Improvement | No. of Studies Reporting the Outcome | Success Rate (% Reporting at Least Some Improvement) |
---|---|---|---|
Clinical Health Outcomes | 15 | 27 | 55.6% |
Body Composition | 16 | 29 | 55.2% |
Diet and Nutrition | 12 | 19 | 63.2% |
PA and Function | 26 | 32 | 81.3% |
Sleep Habits and Quality | 2 | 7 | 28.6% |
Stress and Coping | 4 | 5 | 80% |
Depression and Anxiety | 3 | 7 | 42.9% |
Self-Efficacy | 1 | 3 | 33.3% |
Work-Related | 7 | 16 | 43.8% |
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Zhang, S.; Nie, M.; Peng, J.; Ren, H. Effectiveness of Physical Activity-Led Workplace Health Promotion Interventions: A Systematic Review. Healthcare 2025, 13, 1292. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13111292
Zhang S, Nie M, Peng J, Ren H. Effectiveness of Physical Activity-Led Workplace Health Promotion Interventions: A Systematic Review. Healthcare. 2025; 13(11):1292. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13111292
Chicago/Turabian StyleZhang, Shichao, Mingjian Nie, Jiale Peng, and Hong Ren. 2025. "Effectiveness of Physical Activity-Led Workplace Health Promotion Interventions: A Systematic Review" Healthcare 13, no. 11: 1292. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13111292
APA StyleZhang, S., Nie, M., Peng, J., & Ren, H. (2025). Effectiveness of Physical Activity-Led Workplace Health Promotion Interventions: A Systematic Review. Healthcare, 13(11), 1292. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13111292