The investigators will conduct an embedded mixed methods study in which the primary approach is a randomized controlled trial (RCT), and the secondary or embedded approach is a descriptive qualitative study. The aim of the RCT is to assess the impact of presbyopic correction on workplace productivity and retention in the textile industry in a low middle-income country. Additional qualitative data will be collected to enhance understanding of factors linked to reasons why enrolled sew-ers left their job during the study. Participants will be textile workers aged 30 years and above with uncorrected presbyopia who are employed by Shahi Exports Private Limited in Karnataka, India.
Globally, 1.1 billion people lack a simple pair of reading glasses to correct impaired near vision, called presbyopia. Presbyopia can begin as early as age 30 years, commonly becomes functionally apparent by 40, and is essentially complete by 55 meaning that presbyopia is most common at the height of the working years. The global productivity loss due to uncorrected presbyopia has been estimated to exceed US$25 billion, and presbyopia is shown to be associated with significant impairment in activities of daily living. There is paucity in trial evidence of the impact on near vision spectacle correction on work productivity and workplace retention. The largest reported effect sizes among such trials (specifically for productivity) was the PROSPER trial, which showed that providing inexpensive near vision glasses increased the daily weight of tea picked among presbyopic, mostly-female Indian agricultural workers by more than 5 kg (21.7%) compared to those in the control group. Study Plan: The investigators will choose 1260 textile workers aged 30 years and above with uncorrected presbyopia who are employed by Shahi Exports Private Limited in Karnataka, India. They will be randomly assigned into one of two groups: a group receiving free reading glasses within one week of undergoing vision assessment ("Intervention") or a group receiving identical reading glasses at the end of the assessment period ("Control").The main study outcome will be the proportion of workers who continue working at the factories in the intervention group (as opposed to control). The investigators anticipate that the glasses intervention will increase retention by 20% in the Intervention group at 1 year. The study will also assess the workers' efficiency, why they have left employment, how satisfied and valued they felt at their work and how often they use their glasses for work. These other outcomes will help the investigators to better understand the causal pathway between vision and work retention. The investigators will also study the total cost of providing glasses per additional worker retain their employment. Research question: Will providing free glasses to presbyopic Indian textile workers increase work retention? Design: Investigator-masked, multi-center randomized controlled trial with a qualitative component Rationale: Although presbyopia is safely, effectively and inexpensively treated with glasses, rates of optical correction in LMICs are as low as 10%. The way in which firms manage workers has profound implications for performance by way of worker attendance, retention, and productivity. Similarly, worker engagement, and the extent to which workers feel valued, is a key determinant of firm performance. As the low-skill workforce in many developing countries transitions rapidly from agriculture to industrial work, employers struggle with high worker turnover due to poor working conditions, low pay, and restricted worker rights. Few trials have been published which address the question of whether healthcare interventions can improve work performance as well as workplace retention, especially among persons over the age of 40 in low and middle-income countries (LMICs). There is interest in understanding if these results obtained in an agricultural setting can be extended to other financially-important sectors. Methods: The investigators will choose 1260 textile workers aged 30 years and above with uncorrected presbyopia who are employed by Shahi Exports Private Limited in Karnataka, India. They will be randomly assigned into one of two groups: a group receiving free reading glasses within one week of undergoing vision assessment ("Intervention") or a group receiving identical reading glasses at the end of the assessment period ("Control"). The main outcome 18 month later will be work retention; secondary outcomes are workers' efficiency, the reasons the workers left their employment, satisfaction and perceived self-valued at work and glasses wear adherence at work. Attitudes about presbyopia and spectacle use and intervention cost-effectiveness will be studied.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
1,291
Intervention group workers receive free glasses within one week of undergoing vision assessment (May 2022). The duration of the treatment for the Intervention participants will depend on when they leave employment at the factor. If they stayed for the full duration of the trial, they will have undergone a maximum of 18 months (December 2023).
Good Business Lab
Bengaluru, Karantaka, India
Work retention
Proportion of textile workers who continue to work at the textile factories assessed from trial entry to closure as recorded in Shahi's Human Resource Management Database
Time frame: September 2022 to May 2024; Over the 18 month follow-up period from enrolment to study completion
Compliance with spectacle wear
Actual presence of spectacles on the worker's face at work as reported by supervisor at the time of unannounced observation
Time frame: 3, 6, 9, 12, 15 and 18 months after enrolment
Change in work satisfaction
Proportion of sew-ers who state they are satisfied or very satisfied with work, feel valued or very valued at work, and are likely or very likely to stay with Shahi
Time frame: Between baseline and 3, 6, 9, 12, 15 and 18 months after enrolment
Change in feeling valued-at-work
Proportion of sew-ers who state they feel valued or very valued working at Shahi
Time frame: Between baseline and 3, 6, 9, 12, 15 and 18 months after enrolment
Change in likeliness to stay at work
Proportion of sew-ers who state they are likely or very likely to stay with Shahi
Time frame: Between baseline and 3, 6, 9, 12, 15 and 18 months after enrolment
Change in work efficiency
Self-assessed productivity scores using the Cantril's Ladder, with the best possible score being a 10, and the worst being a 0.
Time frame: Between baseline and 3, 6, 9, 12, 15 and 18 months after enrolment
Attitudes towards vision correction
Worker's self-reported attitudes towards vision correction
Time frame: At month 0
Access to local eyecare services
Worker's self-reported access to local eyecare services
Time frame: At month 0
History of uptake of eyecare services
Worker's self-reported history of uptake of eyecare services
Time frame: At month 0
Change in Quality of Life as assessed by the THRIVE Near Vision Quality of Life tool
Self-reported quality of life scores measured with the modified THRIVE Near Vision Quality of Life tool, a Likert Scale ranging from 1 (least affected) to 5 (worst affected).
Time frame: Between baseline and endline at 18 months
Reasons leaving employment at Shahi
Reasons given by the former supervisor and colleagues of former sew-ers for workers no longer being employed at Shahi
Time frame: 2 months within participants leaving employment
Change in work productivity
Proportion of target production realized by a worker per unit time.
Time frame: Between baseline and 3, 6, 9, 12, 15 and 18 months after enrolment
Cost effectiveness of intervention
Ratio of incremental program cost to additional workers in the intervention group who retain employment vs. those in the control group. Incremental cost is the difference of program costs between implementation of intervention and control (not including study costs, such as data collection).
Time frame: At study closeout at 18 months
Change in skill grade
Worker's skill grade as reported by supervisor.
Time frame: Between baseline and endline at 18 months
Change in monthly wage
Worker's monthly wage as reported by supervisor.
Time frame: Between baseline and endline at 18 months
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