Differences of wrist/hand pain by country and occupation: findings from the CUPID study
Differences of wrist/hand pain by country and occupation: findings from the CUPID study
OBJECTIVES: Musculoskeletal disorders of the wrist and hand have been linked with various occupational activities, including use of computer keyboards and other repetitive manual tasks. They are also influenced by psychological risk factors. To explore a hypothesised role of culturally determined health beliefs and expectations, we compared rates of wrist/hand pain in workers carrying out similar occupational tasks in culturally diverse settings.
METHODS: As part of the CUPID study, a standardised questionnaire was used to collect baseline data on musculoskeletal symptoms and their risk factors from samples of nurses (12 countries), office workers (10 countries) and manual workers carrying out repetitive tasks with their hands (nine countries). Analysis focused on 9347 workers aged 20–59 years. Simple descriptive statistics were used to compare the prevalence of wrist/hand pain by occupational group and country.
RESULTS: Among the office workers, almost all of whom used a computer keyboard for ?4 h/day, the 1-month prevalence of wrist/hand pain varied from 3% in Pakistan and 6% in Japan to 37% in Brazil and 38% in Nicaragua. Within countries, prevalence rates in nurses were generally similar to those in office workers. Pakistani and Japanese manual workers also had low rates of wrist/hand pain, but the lowest prevalence was in Brazilian cane cutters (2%), and the highest in Italian workers at a toy factory (43%).
CONCLUSIONS: Country of residence appears to be a much more important determinant of wrist/hand pain than workplace physical activity. Possible reasons for the major differences in prevalence between countries will be discussed.
9
Coggon, D.
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Harris, E.C.
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Ntani, G.
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Palmer, K.
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7 September 2011
Coggon, D.
2b43ce0a-cc61-4d86-b15d-794208ffa5d3
Harris, E.C.
3e4bd946-3f09-45a1-8725-d35e80dd7971
Ntani, G.
9b009e0a-5ab2-4c6e-a9fd-15a601e92be5
Palmer, K.
0cfe63f0-1d33-40ff-ae8c-6c33601df850
Coggon, D., Harris, E.C., Ntani, G. and Palmer, K.
(2011)
Differences of wrist/hand pain by country and occupation: findings from the CUPID study.
22nd International Conference on Epidemiology in Occupational Health, Oxford, United Kingdom.
07 - 11 Sep 2011.
.
(doi:10.1136/oemed-2011-100382.25).
Record type:
Conference or Workshop Item
(Other)
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Musculoskeletal disorders of the wrist and hand have been linked with various occupational activities, including use of computer keyboards and other repetitive manual tasks. They are also influenced by psychological risk factors. To explore a hypothesised role of culturally determined health beliefs and expectations, we compared rates of wrist/hand pain in workers carrying out similar occupational tasks in culturally diverse settings.
METHODS: As part of the CUPID study, a standardised questionnaire was used to collect baseline data on musculoskeletal symptoms and their risk factors from samples of nurses (12 countries), office workers (10 countries) and manual workers carrying out repetitive tasks with their hands (nine countries). Analysis focused on 9347 workers aged 20–59 years. Simple descriptive statistics were used to compare the prevalence of wrist/hand pain by occupational group and country.
RESULTS: Among the office workers, almost all of whom used a computer keyboard for ?4 h/day, the 1-month prevalence of wrist/hand pain varied from 3% in Pakistan and 6% in Japan to 37% in Brazil and 38% in Nicaragua. Within countries, prevalence rates in nurses were generally similar to those in office workers. Pakistani and Japanese manual workers also had low rates of wrist/hand pain, but the lowest prevalence was in Brazilian cane cutters (2%), and the highest in Italian workers at a toy factory (43%).
CONCLUSIONS: Country of residence appears to be a much more important determinant of wrist/hand pain than workplace physical activity. Possible reasons for the major differences in prevalence between countries will be discussed.
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Published date: 7 September 2011
Venue - Dates:
22nd International Conference on Epidemiology in Occupational Health, Oxford, United Kingdom, 2011-09-07 - 2011-09-11
Organisations:
Human Development & Health
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Local EPrints ID: 356130
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/356130
PURE UUID: 250346b2-2f85-42dc-8f1f-860c63d043f2
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Date deposited: 17 Sep 2013 13:53
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:52
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Author:
D. Coggon
Author:
E.C. Harris
Author:
K. Palmer
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