Effort–reward imbalance and one-year change in neck–shoulder and upper extremity pain among call center computer operators

OBJECTIVE: The literature on psychosocial job factors and musculoskeletal pain is inconclusive in part due to insufficient control for confounding by biomechanical factors. The aim of this study was to investigate prospectively the independent effects of effort–reward imbalance (ERI) at work on regi...

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Main Authors: Niklas Krause, Barbara Burgel, David Rempel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nordic Association of Occupational Safety and Health (NOROSH) 2010-01-01
Series:Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health
Subjects:
msd
eri
Online Access: https://www.sjweh.fi/show_abstract.php?abstract_id=2881
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spelling doaj-d1cbba3bf6ff41268fc966f9d4b765ad2021-04-23T07:50:05ZengNordic Association of Occupational Safety and Health (NOROSH)Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health0355-31401795-990X2010-01-01361425310.5271/sjweh.28812881Effort–reward imbalance and one-year change in neck–shoulder and upper extremity pain among call center computer operatorsNiklas Krause0Barbara BurgelDavid RempelDr N Krause, University of California at San Francisco University of California Berkeley Richmond Field Station, Richmond, CA 94804, USA.OBJECTIVE: The literature on psychosocial job factors and musculoskeletal pain is inconclusive in part due to insufficient control for confounding by biomechanical factors. The aim of this study was to investigate prospectively the independent effects of effort–reward imbalance (ERI) at work on regional musculoskeletal pain of the neck and upper extremities of call center operators after controlling for (i) duration of computer use both at work and at home, (ii) ergonomic workstation design, (iii) physical activities during leisure time, and (iv) other individual worker characteristics. METHODS: This was a one-year prospective study among 165 call center operators who participated in a randomized ergonomic intervention trial that has been described previously. Over an approximate four-week period, we measured ERI and 28 potential confounders via a questionnaire at baseline. Regional upper-body pain and computer use was measured by weekly surveys for up to 12 months following the implementation of ergonomic interventions. Regional pain change scores were calculated as the difference between average weekly pain scores pre- and post intervention. RESULTS: A significant relationship was found between high average ERI ratios and one-year increases in right upper-extremity pain after adjustment for pre-intervention regional mean pain score, current and past physical workload, ergonomic workstation design, and anthropometric, sociodemographic, and behavioral risk factors. No significant associations were found with change in neck–shoulder or left upper-extremity pain. CONCLUSIONS: This study suggests that ERI predicts regional upper-extremity pain in ­computer operators working ≥20 hours per week. Control for physical workload and ergonomic workstation design was essential for identifying ERI as a risk factor. https://www.sjweh.fi/show_abstract.php?abstract_id=2881 prospective studycomputer operatorjob stressvideo display unitshoulderpainvideo display terminalupper extremityneckeffort–reward imbalancecall centercall-center operatormsdericall center computer operatormusculoskeletal disorderupper-extremity painoccupational epidemiologyneck–shoulder pain
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Niklas Krause
Barbara Burgel
David Rempel
spellingShingle Niklas Krause
Barbara Burgel
David Rempel
Effort–reward imbalance and one-year change in neck–shoulder and upper extremity pain among call center computer operators
Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health
prospective study
computer operator
job stress
video display unit
shoulder
pain
video display terminal
upper extremity
neck
effort–reward imbalance
call center
call-center operator
msd
eri
call center computer operator
musculoskeletal disorder
upper-extremity pain
occupational epidemiology
neck–shoulder pain
author_facet Niklas Krause
Barbara Burgel
David Rempel
author_sort Niklas Krause
title Effort–reward imbalance and one-year change in neck–shoulder and upper extremity pain among call center computer operators
title_short Effort–reward imbalance and one-year change in neck–shoulder and upper extremity pain among call center computer operators
title_full Effort–reward imbalance and one-year change in neck–shoulder and upper extremity pain among call center computer operators
title_fullStr Effort–reward imbalance and one-year change in neck–shoulder and upper extremity pain among call center computer operators
title_full_unstemmed Effort–reward imbalance and one-year change in neck–shoulder and upper extremity pain among call center computer operators
title_sort effort–reward imbalance and one-year change in neck–shoulder and upper extremity pain among call center computer operators
publisher Nordic Association of Occupational Safety and Health (NOROSH)
series Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health
issn 0355-3140
1795-990X
publishDate 2010-01-01
description OBJECTIVE: The literature on psychosocial job factors and musculoskeletal pain is inconclusive in part due to insufficient control for confounding by biomechanical factors. The aim of this study was to investigate prospectively the independent effects of effort–reward imbalance (ERI) at work on regional musculoskeletal pain of the neck and upper extremities of call center operators after controlling for (i) duration of computer use both at work and at home, (ii) ergonomic workstation design, (iii) physical activities during leisure time, and (iv) other individual worker characteristics. METHODS: This was a one-year prospective study among 165 call center operators who participated in a randomized ergonomic intervention trial that has been described previously. Over an approximate four-week period, we measured ERI and 28 potential confounders via a questionnaire at baseline. Regional upper-body pain and computer use was measured by weekly surveys for up to 12 months following the implementation of ergonomic interventions. Regional pain change scores were calculated as the difference between average weekly pain scores pre- and post intervention. RESULTS: A significant relationship was found between high average ERI ratios and one-year increases in right upper-extremity pain after adjustment for pre-intervention regional mean pain score, current and past physical workload, ergonomic workstation design, and anthropometric, sociodemographic, and behavioral risk factors. No significant associations were found with change in neck–shoulder or left upper-extremity pain. CONCLUSIONS: This study suggests that ERI predicts regional upper-extremity pain in ­computer operators working ≥20 hours per week. Control for physical workload and ergonomic workstation design was essential for identifying ERI as a risk factor.
topic prospective study
computer operator
job stress
video display unit
shoulder
pain
video display terminal
upper extremity
neck
effort–reward imbalance
call center
call-center operator
msd
eri
call center computer operator
musculoskeletal disorder
upper-extremity pain
occupational epidemiology
neck–shoulder pain
url https://www.sjweh.fi/show_abstract.php?abstract_id=2881
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AT davidrempel effortrewardimbalanceandoneyearchangeinneckshoulderandupperextremitypainamongcallcentercomputeroperators
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