Governmental regulations for early retirement by means of energy expenditure cut offs

OBJECTIVES: Long-term heavy work impairs employees, and they may retire prematurely by law. We investigated the value of energy expenditure (EE) during work shifts as a means to define heavy workload. METHODS: The study comprised 79 male [mean age 32.2 (standard deviation [SD] 7.5) years] and 33 fem...

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Main Authors: Georg Wultsch, Stefan Rinnerhofer, Gerhard Tschakert, Peter Hofmann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nordic Association of Occupational Safety and Health (NOROSH) 2012-07-01
Series:Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health
Subjects:
Online Access: https://www.sjweh.fi/show_abstract.php?abstract_id=3195
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spelling doaj-75a7c9089dd64b6e823122c86a8893d62021-04-22T09:20:44ZengNordic Association of Occupational Safety and Health (NOROSH)Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health0355-31401795-990X2012-07-0138437037910.5271/sjweh.31953195Governmental regulations for early retirement by means of energy expenditure cut offsGeorg WultschStefan RinnerhoferGerhard TschakertPeter Hofmann0Human Performance Research Graz, Karl-Franzens-University & Medical University Graz, Max Mell Alle 11, AT-8010 Graz, Austria.OBJECTIVES: Long-term heavy work impairs employees, and they may retire prematurely by law. We investigated the value of energy expenditure (EE) during work shifts as a means to define heavy workload. METHODS: The study comprised 79 male [mean age 32.2 (standard deviation [SD] 7.5) years] and 33 female [33.5 (SD 11.2) years] employees in different occupations classified as "heavy work" (EE of 1400 and 2000 kcal for women and men, respectively). Cycle ergometry determined exercise performance. Gas exchange measures were performed during selected phases of work, and heart rate (HR) recordings were obtained for a complete work shift. EE was calculated from gas exchange measures. RESULTS: Male and female subjects differed significantly for maximal power output (P_max) [men=206.3 (SD 47.3) watts; women=149.6 (SD 36.1) watts] and maximal oxygen consumption (VO_2max) [men=2.965 (SD 0.63) l/min; women= 1.958 (SD 0.50) l/min] in the cycle ergometer test. Shift HR (HR_Sh) was found between 102 (SD 14) b/min [57.6 (SD 8.5) % HR_max] and 99 (SD 10) b/min [55.5 (SD 5.9) % HR_max] dependent on tasks and groups. Working EE was found between 1864 (SD 732) kcal and 1249 (SD 609) kcal for men and women, respectively, but approximately 60% of subjects were well below the legal limits. CONCLUSIONS: The legal definition of heavy workload by mean working EE per 8-hour work shift applies to all investigated occupations; however, a substantial proportion of workers may not fulfill the criterion if applied individually. Alternative definitions of heavy workload in terms of absolute oxygen consumption or EE relative to cardiorespiratory fitness lead to similar classification results of the investigated occupations. https://www.sjweh.fi/show_abstract.php?abstract_id=3195 gas exchange measureheavy workloadretirement planenergy expenditureretirementearly retirementheart rate monitoring
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Georg Wultsch
Stefan Rinnerhofer
Gerhard Tschakert
Peter Hofmann
spellingShingle Georg Wultsch
Stefan Rinnerhofer
Gerhard Tschakert
Peter Hofmann
Governmental regulations for early retirement by means of energy expenditure cut offs
Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health
gas exchange measure
heavy workload
retirement plan
energy expenditure
retirement
early retirement
heart rate monitoring
author_facet Georg Wultsch
Stefan Rinnerhofer
Gerhard Tschakert
Peter Hofmann
author_sort Georg Wultsch
title Governmental regulations for early retirement by means of energy expenditure cut offs
title_short Governmental regulations for early retirement by means of energy expenditure cut offs
title_full Governmental regulations for early retirement by means of energy expenditure cut offs
title_fullStr Governmental regulations for early retirement by means of energy expenditure cut offs
title_full_unstemmed Governmental regulations for early retirement by means of energy expenditure cut offs
title_sort governmental regulations for early retirement by means of energy expenditure cut offs
publisher Nordic Association of Occupational Safety and Health (NOROSH)
series Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health
issn 0355-3140
1795-990X
publishDate 2012-07-01
description OBJECTIVES: Long-term heavy work impairs employees, and they may retire prematurely by law. We investigated the value of energy expenditure (EE) during work shifts as a means to define heavy workload. METHODS: The study comprised 79 male [mean age 32.2 (standard deviation [SD] 7.5) years] and 33 female [33.5 (SD 11.2) years] employees in different occupations classified as "heavy work" (EE of 1400 and 2000 kcal for women and men, respectively). Cycle ergometry determined exercise performance. Gas exchange measures were performed during selected phases of work, and heart rate (HR) recordings were obtained for a complete work shift. EE was calculated from gas exchange measures. RESULTS: Male and female subjects differed significantly for maximal power output (P_max) [men=206.3 (SD 47.3) watts; women=149.6 (SD 36.1) watts] and maximal oxygen consumption (VO_2max) [men=2.965 (SD 0.63) l/min; women= 1.958 (SD 0.50) l/min] in the cycle ergometer test. Shift HR (HR_Sh) was found between 102 (SD 14) b/min [57.6 (SD 8.5) % HR_max] and 99 (SD 10) b/min [55.5 (SD 5.9) % HR_max] dependent on tasks and groups. Working EE was found between 1864 (SD 732) kcal and 1249 (SD 609) kcal for men and women, respectively, but approximately 60% of subjects were well below the legal limits. CONCLUSIONS: The legal definition of heavy workload by mean working EE per 8-hour work shift applies to all investigated occupations; however, a substantial proportion of workers may not fulfill the criterion if applied individually. Alternative definitions of heavy workload in terms of absolute oxygen consumption or EE relative to cardiorespiratory fitness lead to similar classification results of the investigated occupations.
topic gas exchange measure
heavy workload
retirement plan
energy expenditure
retirement
early retirement
heart rate monitoring
url https://www.sjweh.fi/show_abstract.php?abstract_id=3195
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