Authors
Lina Engelen, Josephine Chau, Sarah Young, Martin Mackey, Dheepa Jeyapalan, Adrian Bauman
Publication date
2019/5/19
Source
Building research & information
Volume
47
Issue
4
Pages
468-479
Publisher
Routledge
Description
Numerous claims have been made about the benefits of activity-based working (ABW) on workers’ health and work performance. Yet, it is unclear if these claims are proven. This systematic review aims to establish whether there is an evidence base for the effects of ABW on health, work performance and perceptions of the work environment. Eight databases were searched in September 2016. Three reviewers independently screened titles and abstracts and assessed the studies and extracted the data. Seventeen studies involving 36,039 participants were included. The study designs varied in rigorousness from qualitative studies to pre–post-trials and in sample size ranging from 12 to 11,799. This review found that ABW has positive merits in the areas of interaction, communication, control of time and space, and satisfaction with the workspace; however, it is unfavourable for concentration and privacy. For physical …
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Scholar articles
L Engelen, J Chau, S Young, M Mackey, D Jeyapalan… - Building research & information, 2019