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Assessment of Physical Capacity and Job Demands

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Title: Assessment of Physical Capacity and Job Demands Author: Tony Leyland Last modified by: Hernandez Created Date: 2/5/2002 2:13:37 AM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Assessment of Physical Capacity and Job Demands


1
Assessment of Physical Capacity and Job Demands
  • Readings - Occupational Ergonomics Handbook
  • Ch. 14 Louhevaara
  • Ch. 70 Anderson Ch. 72 Key
  • Outline
  • Maintaining work ability
  • Physical job demands and fitness
  • firefighters,police, cleaners
  • Physical ability testing
  • Analysis, protocol design
  • Assessing Functional capacities
  • principles
  • outcomes

2
Job demands and Physical Fitness
  • Include physical, mental and social loading
    factors
  • 20 of work force in industrialized countries
    exposed to heavy muscular work
  • dec in dynamic jobs with simple tools
  • inc in static, repetitive tasks
  • when redesign is not feasible, physical fitness
    becomes important
  • secondary preventative measures
  • individual health promotion
  • healthy satisfying lifestyle
  • maintaining work ability / healthy aging

3
Maintenance Ability
  • Fig 14-1
  • work and environment
  • Organization / Cultural
  • Individual worker
  • Physical Job Demands
  • categorize workload
  • Fig 14-2
  • heavy dynamic work
  • large ms groups - Cardiorespiratory
  • manual materials handling
  • dynamic/static - CV and muscular
  • static postural work
  • lrg and small ms - muscular strain
  • repetitive work
  • small - muscular strain

4
Physical work load
  • Affected by use of strength, frequency of peak
    loading, work/rest ratio, environmental factors,
    intensity
  • level of strain - depends on demand and
    individual
  • optimal / acceptable demand criteria
  • cardio, muscular and psychosocial strain
  • physiological changes
  • fatigue
  • specific local changes (small muscles)
  • if job demands
  • do not exceed capacity - adaptation
  • too high - fatigue, dec productivity
  • prolonged / repetitive - damage / injury

5
Physical Fitness
  • Fig 14-3 dimensions of Fitness
  • CV (aerobic) capacity
  • muscular performance
  • motor coordination
  • based on physiological demands and Anthropometric
    characteristics
  • Utilization of capacity requires voluntary
    control - therefore all linked to MOTIVATION
  • optimal situation - harmony between demand and
    fitness
  • Text looks at specifics of Police, Fire and
    Professional Cleaners

6
Fire Fighters
  • 200 subjects - job demands of physical fitness
    and aerobic power
  • muscular performance and motor coordination
  • smoke diving with SCBA-
  • aerobic demand
  • clearing passages with heavy manual tools -most
    muscular demand
  • roof operations- motor control demand
  • Aerobic Power Demand - Table 14-1
  • often 2.1-2.8 L/min
  • max frequent 3.8 L/min 180 bpm
  • compounded by need to disperse heat
  • no possibility of alleviating load
  • recommend min 34-45 ml/min/Kg

7
Fire Fighters
  • Muscular Performance
  • biomech factors - simulated clearing task - 9 kg
    power saw - floor to ceiling
  • high compression on L5/S1
  • 90 of isokinetic strength
  • back and knee extension
  • Table 14.1 - minimum of good or excellent

8
Physical Exercise and Fitness
  • one of the basic elements in maintenance of work
    ability
  • linked with productivity, quality of work,
    absenteeism, and turnover rate
  • program must be tailored to job demands
  • successful intervention requires
  • commitment and support
  • management and those involved
  • use of work time (for at least part)
  • feedback and strong motivation
  • positive experience with exercise
  • skill full instruction
  • confidential, voluntary and no guilt

9
Physical Ability Testing
  • Ch 70 - Anderson
  • decline of 20-40 in injury rates
  • effectiveness
  • does test battery assess what it intends
  • requires thorough job analysis
  • carefully chosen tests
  • validation that test predicts performance
  • courts prefer testing to be focused on ability to
    perform
  • not risk of injury
  • disability act - becomes more complex
  • all require ongoing attention and manipulation

10
Job Analysis
  • Identify essential function of the job
  • functions that define purpose of job
  • cost / benefit analysis
  • cost of not being able to perform task
  • probability of individual lacking ability
  • balance with cost of testing applicants
  • test required to have a high degree of
    relatedness to essential function
  • accurate - precisely measures attribute it says
    it measures
  • reliable - yields same results
  • over time and by different testers
  • objective rather than subjective tests

11
Validation
  • Statistical validation
  • prospective - test individuals - do not use
    results - analyze performance
  • productivity, retention, injury rate, supervisor
    evaluation
  • Fig 70-1 - injury rate twice as high
  • or implement test in hiring practice, and compare
    to those hired prior
  • lack of control for other factors
  • All applicants must be treated fairly
  • all must be tested - same preparation
  • same re-testing procedures

12
Assessment of Worker Capacities
  • Knowledge of worker functional capacities
    important
  • decision to hire
  • decision to return to work
  • Fig 72-1
  • FCA - Functional Capacity Assessment
  • return to work testing process
  • individual physical functional work related
    capability
  • confirmation of meeting or not meeting minimum
    physical requirements
  • goal - return to work ASAP
  • even if at limited capacity, some pain

13
Job Placement Assessment
  • Provides data prior to hiring
  • assists managers - reduce injuries
  • JPA - specific, objective, standardized protocols
    accurate and repeatable
  • eg. Lifting, carrying, pushing , pulling
  • desire -accurately match worker with job
  • Components of assessment fig 72-2
  • weighted capabilities -CV, posture
  • tolerance and endurance capabilities
  • establish safe limits for work day
  • Validity of participant
  • fig 72-3 - less dishonest than generally assumed
    - utilize database correlation
  • push vs pull, HR response at exertion

14
Worker Assessment Principles
  • For selecting FCA
  • must contain standards for identifying validity
    of participation
  • methodology must be consistent
  • utilize standard equipment
  • administrators must be trained and objective
  • processing of results must be standardized
  • Fig 72-5
  • reports should compare results with demands of
    job
  • unbiased and defendable decision about return to
    work

15
Outcomes
  • Primarily - dec reinjury rates
  • dec lapse of time before return to work
  • dec incidents and costs
  • JPA
  • eg fig 72-6 paper manufacturer
  • pre and post JPA implementation
  • Fig 72-7, 72-8
  • possible decision pathways once information is
    available
  • Diversification - Inc utilization and
    effectiveness
  • mobile assessment
  • onsite services
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