Workforce Management during the Time of COVID-19—Lessons Learned and Future Measures
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
3. Materials and Methods
- Articles related to COVID-19 published between March 2020 and September 2022.
- Articles related to challenges faced during COVID-19 by businesses and industries, essential businesses and services that supported continuity of critical functions during the pandemic, best practices learned to prepare for and cope with future crisis, rules and regulations to control spread of infection, sustainability and resiliency of industrial and business sectors during COVID-19.
- All reports included original studies, reviews, editorials, viewpoints, guidelines, news articles, online articles, and government documents.
- Articles irrelevant to COVID-19.
- Articles written in other languages than English.
- Preprints.
- Unavailable full texts.
- Articles included: 85.
- Government articles/documents: 13 (CDC, FEMA, FDA, EPA, WHO, ILO, OECD).
- News and electronic articles: 28 (International, The News; Frontier Economics, CNN Business, Wall street journal, USA Today).
- Pharmaceutical: 5 (PubMed, Google Scholar, Science Direct, Scopus, and the Web of Science).
- Food and agriculture: 17 (PubMed, Google Scholar, Science Direct, Scopus, Web of Science, CDC, OECD.org, FDA).
- Manufacturing: 8 (PubMed, Google Scholar, Science Direct, Scopus, Web of Science, online articles).
- Construction: 8 (PubMed, Google Scholar, CPWR, PubMed, AIHA, CDC, online articles).
- Healthcare: 8 (PubMed, Google Scholar, Science Direct, Scopus, Web of Science, online articles).
- Transportation: 5 (PubMed, Google Scholar, Science Direct, Scopus, FEMA, online articles).
- Retail: 6 (PubMed, Google Scholar, Science Direct, Scopus, online articles).
- Waterworks: 7 (PubMed, Google Scholar, Science Direct, Scopus, EPA, CDC, Frontier Economics).
- Waste management: 5 (PubMed, Google Scholar, Science Direct, Scopus, and the Web of Science).
4. Results
4.1. COVID-19 Impact on Pharmaceutical Industry
4.1.1. Challenges Faced
4.1.2. Lessons Learned and Future Measures
4.2. COVID-19 Impact on the Healthcare Industry
4.2.1. Challenges Faced
4.2.2. Lessons Learned and Future Measures
- Effective crisis management to reduce healthcare professionals’ psychological stress is required to protect their mental health, well-being, and functioning.
- Sector-specific crisis measures are recommended to effectively address the specific work stressors faced by the outpatient sector, which is urgently required.
- Healthcare professionals might benefit from coping strategies that facilitate the utilization of social support, including team commitment and knowledge exchange.
- Flexible scheduling during pandemics should allow healthcare workers to interact with families and friends in ways that facilitate social support outside work [23].
- Adaptive coping strategies will moderate the negative effect of stress on burnout, which in turn will help reduce intentions to quit.
- Educating healthcare professionals on resilience training and focusing on adaptive coping approaches will be beneficial in minimizing stress and burnout [24]. During pandemics such as COVID-19, healthcare providers’ well-being and morale were particularly at stake. Healthcare systems and organizations should provide support to protect their clinical staff from burnout. A study reported that the stigma associated with COVID-19 may have contributed to burnout among healthcare providers. This burnout can be managed by providing training to learn new skills to cope with stigma and its negative impact on well-being [25].
4.3. COVID-19 Impact on Food and Agriculture
4.3.1. Challenges Faced
4.3.2. Lessons Learned and Future Measures
- COVID-19 caused a short supply of stock as many exporters restricted exports, forcing many countries that rely on exports to feed their populations to purchase in excess and stockpile their grains and foods. The international agriculture and food markets should remain open and transparent without trade restrictions.
- Non-tariff measures to minimize the trade cost during a crisis.
- Address labor constraints, declare food safety workers as essential, facilitate farmers with flexible scheduling and alternate work, and take health and safety measures for farmers.
- Establish biosafety and biosecurity regulations for properly handling foods, including the humane slaughter of animals, safe preparation and handling of animals, and consumption of meat.
- Cooperate with private sectors for smooth functioning of food supply chains.
- Ensure food and nutrition standards of vulnerable populations, such as the elderly, chronically ill, poor, and people following social distancing for exposure to COVID-19, are met. Emergency food assistance, food banks, school meals, and low-cost options in supermarkets should sufficiently meet demands.
4.4. COVID-19 Impact on Manufacturing Industry
4.4.1. Challenges Faced
4.4.2. Lessons Learned and Future Measures
- Protecting the workforce: creating standard operating procedures and safety protocols for keeping workers safe during COVID-19 [46].
- Driving productivity at a distance: effectively managing performance at the plant for onsite employees while continuing physical distancing and remote work for other employees [46].
- Communication and risk management: Two-way information exchange between managers and employees to discuss the crisis of COVID-19, proper ways to manage risk, and protect employees in the plant [46]. Conduct a continuity business risk assessment.
- Protecting supply chains: Focus on geographic diversification by reducing dependence on only one country or significant location. Utilize digital technologies such as cargo tracking and cloud-based GPS to increase the visibility of the supply chain. Engineer supply chain to be sustainable and resilient during the crisis by focusing on an agile supply chain network, end-to-end visibility for the supplier ecosystem, and real-time data collection to identify disruptions in the process [47].
4.5. COVID-19 Impact on the Construction Industry
4.5.1. Challenges Faced
4.5.2. Lessons Learned and Future Measures
Engineering Controls
- Ventilation
- 2.
- Social Distance and Physical Barriers
- 3.
- Procedures
- 4.
- Additional Administrative Controls
- 5.
- Training
- 6.
- Personal Protective Equipment
4.6. COVID 19 Impact on the Transportation Industry
4.6.1. Challenges Faced
4.6.2. Lessons Learned and Future Measures
- Allowing for rear door boarding and limiting the exposure between drivers and passengers.
- Passengers with accessibility/mobility needs may request to use the front door to access the ramp.
- Some bus operators were not able to automatically open rear doors. Commuters may have to open back doors, further exposing them to COVID-19 manually. Automatic system implementation for opening doors may prevent exposure.
- Cleaning all vehicles daily and disinfecting commonly touched surfaces multiple times a day.
- Numerous transit systems can reduce services to increase safety for operators while discouraging unnecessary trips to decrease the risk to those who use public transportation.
- Managing overcrowding by reducing seating by 50% by tagging seats as unavailable to adhere to social distancing measures. Once buses have reached capacity, digital signs can advise individuals to wait for the next bus. Transit systems can place passenger limits on fixed-route services. Once a bus is full, the driver may contact a dispatcher to send another vehicle for the remaining passengers.
4.7. COVID-19 Impact on the Retail Industry
4.7.1. Challenges Faced
4.7.2. Lessons Learned and Future Measures
- As appropriate, such as at customer service windows and, if feasible, cash register lanes, use physical barriers to separate retail workers from members of the general public.
- Use rope-and-stanchion systems to keep customers from queueing or congregating near work areas. For example, provide a waiting room for customers separated by at least 6 feet from a cash register workstation. Signage that instructs individuals waiting in line to remain 6 feet back from work areas may bolster the effectiveness of this engineering control.
4.8. COVID 19 Impact on the Waterworks Industry
4.8.1. Challenges Faced
4.8.2. Lessons Learned and Future Measures
4.9. COVID 19 Impact on the Waste Management Industry
4.9.1. Challenges Faced
4.9.2. Lessons Learned and Future Measures
5. Discussion
- Maintaining social distancing of minimum 6 feet from others.
- Wearing face masks.
- Practicing hygiene and sanitation.
- Enforcement of strict regulations by the government to control COVID-19.
- Ventilation control in buildings.
- Remote work options for people when possible etc.
- Open and transparent market for the global supply of goods.
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Industrial Sector | Challenges | Best Practices |
---|---|---|
Pharmaceutical | Medicine shortages, shortage in chronic medications due to panic buying Shortage in medical devices and PPE Time constraints for creating vaccines and novel drugs for COVID-19 | Collaborative inputs and efforts from all interdependent stakeholders Transparent preparedness and contingency plans for disruptions Active management, transparent supply chain process, and timely communications during the crisis |
Food and Agriculture | Restaurants and bars closed down due to the lockdown Supply chain disruptions, shortages due to panic buying, shorter supply of goods due to challenges in shipping and import Reduction in crop and animal production, reduction in labor, farmers discarding their stock due to no demand, loss of jobs, and unstable economy. Meat and poultry workers work close together in facilities and live in shared accommodations, making social distancing difficult | Proper cleaning and prevention of cross-contamination is critical to controlling foodborne illnesses Good hygiene practices, handwashing, and good housekeeping minimize the risk of exposure to any foodborne bacteria and viruses Open and transparent international markets in agriculture and food products Non-tariff measures to minimize the trade cost during the crisis Health and safety measures for farmers |
Manufacturing | Global supply chain disruptions, financial constraints, rapid switch to digital technologies, restricted movement of goods/services Slowed production, closing down of many businesses, loss of jobs Under time pressure, production and supply of critical medical equipment and associated supplies with increasing demand | Protecting the workforce by following safety guidelines, physical distancing, and remote work when possible Hiring of digitally skilled workers for remote work Reduce dependence on single central locations and countries for goods or raw materials, transparent and reliable supply chain |
Construction | Job loss due to the closing down of many construction sites; construction worksites limited the number of people to continue work to practice social distancing, causing longer construction times and an increase in the risk of injuries | Safe work practices include staggered work schedules, practice 6 feet social distancing, rigorous housekeeping, keeping in-person meetings short, practice hygiene, job hazard analysis, PPE, physical barriers to separate employees from public |
Healthcare | Many doctors, nurses, and healthcare staff have lost lives amid the pandemic Hospitals and private practices closing, reduced hours, furloughs, and layoffs of physicians High incidence of burnout was reported among healthcare professionals | Provide patients with Telehealth access so doctors avoid exposure, practice safe distancing, and use proper PPE Effective crisis management targeted at reducing healthcare professionals’ psychological stress Coping strategies, social support, flexible scheduling, resilience training |
Transportation | Decrease in transportation revenue, pay reduction, business closure due to social distancing and lockdown | Reduce transit system services to increase safety for operators Cleaning and disinfecting vehicles, managing overcrowding by reducing seating, rear door boarding |
Retail | Business closures to nonessential stores, bars, and venues, ban on large public gatherings Grocery stores remained open, and consumers appeared to be stocking up on certain goods and supplies; panic buying led to a supply shortage | Hazard and risk assessment, engineering and administrative controls, safe work practices, and PPE to protect retail workers Physical barriers to keep employees separate in cash register lanes, rope-and-stanchion systems to keep customers from queueing or congregating near work areas |
Waterworks | Increase in consumption of water due to shifting of work populations to home, water production cost increase, global recession, and loss of jobs | Guidance to ensure the safety of building water systems, keep household plumbing and the nation’s water infrastructure operating properly |
Waste Management | Lacking access to waste collection and disposal Increase in indoor rat infestation and spread of diseases Panic buying caused an increase in waste disposal; waste collection stopped due to social distancing | Zero waste approach promotes recycling of waste, controls greenhouse gas emissions, and minimizes disposal of toxic waste Conservation of all energy resources and environment, recycling and reuse of waste |
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Bardhan, R.; Byrd, T.; Boyd, J. Workforce Management during the Time of COVID-19—Lessons Learned and Future Measures. COVID 2023, 3, 1-27. https://doi.org/10.3390/covid3010001
Bardhan R, Byrd T, Boyd J. Workforce Management during the Time of COVID-19—Lessons Learned and Future Measures. COVID. 2023; 3(1):1-27. https://doi.org/10.3390/covid3010001
Chicago/Turabian StyleBardhan, Rupkatha, Traci Byrd, and Julie Boyd. 2023. "Workforce Management during the Time of COVID-19—Lessons Learned and Future Measures" COVID 3, no. 1: 1-27. https://doi.org/10.3390/covid3010001
APA StyleBardhan, R., Byrd, T., & Boyd, J. (2023). Workforce Management during the Time of COVID-19—Lessons Learned and Future Measures. COVID, 3(1), 1-27. https://doi.org/10.3390/covid3010001