Something Old, Something New: Measuring the Real Labour Cost of Healthcare Innovation
CAPHRI researchers are redefining how we assess the true workforce impact of new healthcare technologies, moving beyond simple time measurements to ensure innovations genuinely support a sustainable workforce.
The Pressing Need: Moving Beyond the ‘Time-Only’ Trap
Healthcare systems worldwide face the challenge of introducing new technologies without fully understanding their impact on staff. Current Health Technology Assessment (HTA) methods, which guide adoption decisions, rely almost entirely on simple time-based measurements—such as real-time recording or retrospective task estimation.
This approach, however, has several flaws. As the National Healthcare Institute (ZiN) in the Netherlands recently emphasised, implementation decisions must explicitly weigh each technology’s labour impact. The existing ‘time-only’ focus misses the broader picture: the complexity of tasks, their perceived value to caregivers, and crucially, their effect on sustainable employability.
In many cases new technologies counterintuitively increase workload or stress, worsening labour shortages across the sector.
A Multidimensional Solution for Sustainable Healthcare
Recognising these limitations, CAPHRI researchers have launched an initiative to fill this crucial methodological gap. The project aims to develop a comprehensive, versatile tool that redefines how labour input is measured.
“Measuring labour input in healthcare innovations is vital to ensure new technologies truly ease workloads rather than add to them. This collaboration marks an important step towards more sustainable, people-centred healthcare.”
Prof. dr. Angelique de Rijk
This outcome metric will capture three key dimensions for policymakers, researchers, and practitioners: Time Investments, Task Substitution (who performs which tasks, including shifts between professionals or technology), and Work Satisfaction/ Appreciation (how innovations influence caregiver well-being and perceived quality of work).
By integrating perspectives from work and organisational psychology, nursing sciences, health economics, and public health, the initiative significantly advances HTA methodology. The colla-boration between CAPHRI’s research lines Creating Value-Based Health Care (VHC) and Health Inequity and Social Participation (HISP) highlights the essential need for a holistic, multidisciplinary view of sustainable employability in healthcare.
Driving the Quadruple Aim: Impact and Dissemination
The project embodies CAPHRI’s commitment to the Quadruple Aim: improving patient experience, population health, cost-effectiveness, and—critically—the work-life of healthcare providers. Its societal goal is clear: promoting sustainable employability amid increasing labour shortages to safeguard high-quality patient care.
The project will deliver a validated tool to measure labour input in healthcare innovations, including an estimation module. Together with inputs to ZonMw and ZiN policy reports, findings will be disseminated through peer-reviewed journals and major international conferences on HTA, public health, and occupational psychology.
Beyond scientific dissemination, the project’s societal outreach will focus on practice and policy application. It foresees a practical instrument for policymakers and administrators, training sessions and masterclasses for frontline professionals (such as rheumatology nurses and home care workers), and integration into living labs and centers like AWH-Z, Living Lab Health & Labour, and MaastrichtHETA. By actively engaging with national and international partners, the project aims to influence policy and practical discussions on sustainable employability while attracting the public’s attention to this urgent challenge.
Important Output
The primary scientific output will be a validated measurement tool for labor input in healthcare innovations, including an a priori estimation module. Expected outputs include:
- Peer-reviewed journal articles on the methodology and case studies
- Presentations at international conferences (HTA/health economics, public health, occupational psychology)
- Data sets for labor input in case studies (hospital and home care)
- Contributions to ZonMw and ZiN policy reports
In the Media
The project is expected to gain attention due to the urgency of labor shortages in healthcare. Media dissemination will focus on:
- National newspapers and professional magazines (e.g. Zorgvisie)
- Blogs and forums addressing sustainable employability
- To promote our new tool, collaboration with health organizations and policy makers (e.g. Ministry of Health, ZonMw and Zorginstituut Nederland (ZiN) is key.
Also read
-
Cells, pigments or food: looking through the eyes of a microscope
How do you make the tiniest cells visible? At the Microscopy CORE Lab. Kèvin Knoops leads this research platform for light and electron microscopy.
-
Gut bacterium may help maintain weight loss
Researchers at Maastricht University and Wageningen University & Research have made a promising discovery in the fight against obesity. A new clinical study shows that a specific gut bacterium may help limit weight regain after dieting.UM news
-
Collaborative Maastricht University team receives Open Science NL funding
A multidisciplinary team of UM researchers and support staff has been awarded a €250,000 grant from Open Science NL. Their project will highlight an often-overlooked part of academic research: the people who support it behind the scenes.