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A randomised controlled trial evaluating the effects of two workstation interventions on upper body pain and incident musculoskeletal disorders among computer operators
  1. D M Rempel1,
  2. N Krause1,
  3. R Goldberg1,
  4. D Benner2,
  5. M Hudes1,
  6. G U Goldner1
  1. 1Division of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, CA, USA
  2. 2Occupational Health, Kaiser Permanente, Northern California, Oakland, CA, USA
  1. Correspondence to:
 Dr D Rempel
 Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, 1301 South 46th Street, Building 163, Richmond, CA 94804, USA; drempel{at}itsa.ucsf.edu

Abstract

Background: Call centre work with computers is associated with increased rates of upper body pain and musculoskeletal disorders.

Methods: This one year, randomised controlled intervention trial evaluated the effects of a wide forearm support surface and a trackball on upper body pain severity and incident musculoskeletal disorders among 182 call centre operators at a large healthcare company. Participants were randomised to receive (1) ergonomics training only, (2) training plus a trackball, (3) training plus a forearm support, or (4) training plus a trackball and forearm support. Outcome measures were weekly pain severity scores and diagnosis of incident musculoskeletal disorder in the upper extremities or the neck/shoulder region based on physical examination performed by a physician blinded to intervention. Analyses using Cox proportional hazard models and linear regression models adjusted for demographic factors, baseline pain levels, and psychosocial job factors.

Results: Post-intervention, 63 participants were diagnosed with one or more incident musculoskeletal disorders. Hazard rate ratios showed a protective effect of the armboard for neck/shoulder disorders (HR = 0.49, 95% CI 0.24 to 0.97) after adjusting for baseline pain levels and demographic and psychosocial factors. The armboard also significantly reduced neck/shoulder pain (p = 0.01) and right upper extremity pain (p = 0.002) in comparison to the control group. A return-on-investment model predicted a full return of armboard and installation costs within 10.6 months.

Conclusion: Providing a large forearm support combined with ergonomic training is an effective intervention to prevent upper body musculoskeletal disorders and reduce upper body pain associated with computer work among call centre employees.

  • musculoskeletal
  • computer
  • upper extremity
  • intervention
  • RCT

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Footnotes

  • Competing interests: Dr Rempel has done consulting work for Logitech Corporation, the company which markets the trackball tested in the study. There are no other competing interests on the part of the authors.

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