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In February, I was the keynote speaker at the Victorian Workplace Mental Wellbeing Collaboration's Leadership Breakfast about how leaders can use work design principles to assist their employees and colleagues to be well and thrive in their job roles.

Video of my talk


Here are some the key messages of the talk:

  • Good work design contributes to many positive outcomes such as healthy workers, a safer workplace, fewer musculoskeletal injuries, lower absence, reduced worker's compensation claims, motivated and loyal staff, creative and innovative companies, agile teams and organisations, customer loyalty, attraction and retention of talent , higher ROI... a better world!

  • Work can be ‘redesigned’, with positive outcomes for people and performance.

  • Work redesign is often neglected as a strategy for improving well-being and productivity.

For more information on how you can collaborate with you, please visit our website.




perth ambulance

In 2017, researchers from the Centre for Transformative Work Design at UWA conducted a teamwork analysis for the Newborn Emergency Transport Service of Western Australia (NETSWA). NETS staff have very challenging jobs. The primary aim of NETS WA is move sick newborn infants to a specialist hospital for treatment. NETS WA retrieves infants from all hospitals in Western Australia. NETS WA staff rotate regularly and the team make–up changes daily.

This was an exciting and novel project as, to our knowledge, no teamwork analysis in neonatal retrieval medicine has been conducted to date. To guide the analysis of teamwork, we adapted an evidence-based teamwork model to apply it to the NETS context, pictured below.


Anu Bharadwaj (Master’s & PhD student in Organisational Psychology) accompanied various NETS teams on several retrievals around the Perth Metropolitan Area to understand the day-to-day work context and work flow of NETS. She then conducted 16 face-to-face interviews, and carried out a brief survey, with NETS-trained doctors, nurses and ambulance transport officers.

We uncovered several positive findings about teamwork in NETS, including:

1. Well designed individual jobs. Despite high levels of work demands (e.g., workload, complexity), the jobs also had sufficient job resources (e.g., supervisor and colleague support, autonomy) to help staff deal with the high work demands. Good work design for individual team members helps ensure that they have enough cognitive, emotional and physical resources to undertake effective teamwork.

2. Team communication, which is crucial in retrieval medicine, was rated very highly. The importance of good communication was unanimously recognised by interview participants. One way in which NETS facilitates effective communication is by having a daily morning brief at the start of the team’s shift. In these briefs, the day’s team members get to meet each other, discuss any pending issues or tasks, and engage in scenario-based learning and education.

Benefits of conducting the project

“It gave us a forum to talk openly with staff and to get their thoughts/feedback”

-NETSWA

We also made several recommendations to further enhance and develop teamwork, which were presented to NETS staff in face-to-face feedback sessions.

Senior staff were present so that decisions could be made about moving forward. For example, one recommendation was to improve the doctors’ training for particular aspects of the transfer, and we are pleased to have learned this change has now been introduced within NETS.

Changes implemented as a result of the project

“It helped us develop & implement a formalised training session for medical staff.

We have completed our first 4-hour NETS specific training session for medical staff”

-NETSWA

The fieldwork for this project was done by Anu Bharadwaj as part of a Masters in I/O Psychology Placement project. Anu was supervised by Professor Sharon Parker and Karina Jorritsma.




The Centre for Transformative Work Design is delighted to be part of the START project, conducted by Curtin University’s Physical Activity and Wellbeing Lab.

START, Striding TowARds health and well-being Trial, is a workplace walking intervention funded by the Department of Health WA.

Curtin University researchers are seeking to recruit medium to large Perth-based businesses interested in boosting their employees’ physical activity as part of a new pilot project.

Employees who complete the program will be provided with a Fitbit Zip device which they can keep and use to track their physical activity each day.

The research will test the effects of a culture of physical activity fostered by work colleagues to increase walking, and improve health, wellbeing and work outcomes in physically inactive employees.

The researchers are seeking to recruit business owners that will be supportive of employees walking during their lunch break, before or after work.


For more information, please contact:

Miss Joanna Nicholas | joanna.nicholas@curtin.edu.au | 08 9266 2452

Mr Brendan Smith | brendan.smith@curtin.edu.au | 08 9266 2144

You can also visit the START website.



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The Centre for Transformative Work Design

is part of the Future of Work Institute at Curtin University.

© 2026 Centre for Transformative Work Design​​

The Centre acknowledges Whadjuk Nyungar people who remain Custodians of the lands on which we research, learn and collaborate.

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