Study of the effectiveness of a participatory ergonomics intervention in reducing worker pain severity through physical exposure pathways

Publication type
Journal article
Authors
Laing AC, Frazer MB, Cole DC, Kerr MS, Wells R, Norman RW
Date published
2005 Feb 01
Journal
Ergonomics
Volume
48
Issue
2
Pages
150-170
PMID
15764314
Open Access?
No
Abstract

A participatory ergonomics programme was implemented in an automotive parts manufacturing factory. An ergonomics change team was formed composed of members from management and the organized labour union. It was hypothesized that the physical change projects implemented as part of this process would result in decreased worker exposures to peak and cumulative physical demands and reduced worker perceptions of physical effort and pain severity. A quasi-experimental design was employed, utilizing a sister plant in the corporation as a referent group. A longitudinal questionnaire approach was used to document pre-post changes in worker perceptions. In general, the physical change projects were rated as improvements by workers and were successful at reducing peak and/or cumulative mechanical exposures. However, there were few systematic changes in perceived effort or pain severity levels. Explanations include the confounding effects of differential production rate and staffing changes at the intervention and referent plants and/or insufficient overall intervention intensity due to a relatively short intervention period, plant and team ambivalence towards the process and the low overall impact on exposure of the particular changes implemented