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Article type: Research Article
Authors: Grooten, Wilhelmus Johannes Andreas; | Mulder, Marie | Wiktorin, Christina;
Affiliations: Department of Public Health Sciences, Division of Occupational Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden | Department of Occupational and Environmental Health, Stockholm County Council, Sweden
Note: [] Address for correspondence: Wim Grooten, Occupational and Environmental Health, Karolinska Hospital, Norrbacka, SE-171 76 Stockholm, Sweden. Tel.: +46 8 52488876; Fax: +46 8 52488813; E-mail: [email protected]
Abstract: The aim of this study was to examine the effect of two types of ergonomic intervention on pain and pain-related disability in the neck/shoulder and low back regions. A cohort of 492 subjects of various occupations with non-specific neck/shoulder or low back pain was followed over a five to six year period. The study subjects were classified into four intervention groups: no ergonomic intervention, educational worksite intervention, workplace intervention, and combined workplace and educational worksite intervention. The group with no ergonomic intervention was used as the reference group. The changes in pain intensity and pain-related disability from baseline to follow-up in each of the three groups with intervention were compared to the changes in the reference group. During the follow-up, 39% of the subjects had received ergonomic intervention. The average change in pain intensity and pain-related disability was smaller in the educational worksite intervention group than in the reference group. The average reduction of pain intensity and pain-related disability did not differ between the two other intervention groups and the reference group. Thus, for subjects still at work, ergonomic intervention seemed to be ineffective for reducing neck/shoulder and low back pain and pain-related disability.
Keywords: Disability, epidemiology, ergonomics, low back pain, neck pain, occupational medicine
Journal: Work, vol. 28, no. 4, pp. 313-323, 2007
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