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Multiple health-related behaviours among Fly-In Fly-Out workers in the mining industry in Australia: a cross-sectional survey during the COVID-19 pandemic

Multiple health-related behaviours among Fly-In Fly-Out workers in the mining industry in Australia: a cross-sectional survey during the COVID-19 pandemic
Multiple health-related behaviours among Fly-In Fly-Out workers in the mining industry in Australia: a cross-sectional survey during the COVID-19 pandemic
Background: Fly-In-Fly-Out (FIFO) workers travel to work at isolated locations, and rotate continuous workdays with leave periods at home, and such work practice is common in the offshore oil and gas and onshore mining industry worldwide. The COVID-19 pandemic and accompanying public health actions appear to have had a negative impact on several health-related behaviours among the general population. However, little is known about the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the health behaviours of FIFO workers, who have shown higher pre-pandemic rates of risky behaviours than the general population in Australia. This study examined the health-related behaviours of FIFO workers in the mining industry during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Methods: a descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted. FIFO workers from an Australian mining company who underwent COVID-19 screening between May and November 2020 completed an online survey about their regular health-related behaviours. The independent sample t-test and Pearson's chi-square test where appropriate were conducted to examine the differences between males and females for the behavioural outcomes.

Results: a total of 768 FIFO workers (633 males and 135 females) participated in the study. Prevalence of smoking was high (32%). Males smoked more cigarettes per day than females (15.2±7.0 vs 13.1±7.1, p = .174). Most participants (74.7%) drank alcohol on more than two days per week. Compared to females, more males (20.2% vs 8.0%) consumed alcohol at short-term harmful levels (p = .010). About a third (34.4%) of the workers (33.5% of males and 38.5% of females, p = .264) engaged in inadequate moderate-vigorous exercises/physical activity. About a third (33.1%) of workers (33.7% of males and 30.4% of females; p = .699) had multiple risk behaviours.

Conclusions: prevalence of multiple risk behaviours was high. Interventions aimed at the prevention of risky health-related behaviours should target the different behavioural patterns and may require emphasis on gender-informed techniques particularly when addressing alcohol consumption.
1932-6203
Asare, Bernard Yeboah Asiamah
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Thomas, Elizabeth
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Affandi, Jacquita S.
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Schammer, Myles
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Harris, Chris
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Kwasnicka, Dominika
967b4afc-0d59-467f-aa76-44cc15011f4c
Powell, Daniel
e1e53a46-a37b-425b-ac15-e82f99033f46
Reid, Christopher M.
f18464cb-64af-423c-baa1-310da80f7b66
Robinson, Suzanne
381aa349-a158-4001-86e8-20327d1b300d
Asare, Bernard Yeboah Asiamah
c7d96058-74f4-4f2f-a58b-7e62f226f3fa
Thomas, Elizabeth
48964227-7e7b-4020-bfd9-015f94040bc2
Affandi, Jacquita S.
3b1cbd11-284d-45d0-9137-61697249083f
Schammer, Myles
3187f111-e733-4753-a994-f780066189c6
Harris, Chris
869c176d-984e-4d35-a5f5-33d37e3375fe
Kwasnicka, Dominika
967b4afc-0d59-467f-aa76-44cc15011f4c
Powell, Daniel
e1e53a46-a37b-425b-ac15-e82f99033f46
Reid, Christopher M.
f18464cb-64af-423c-baa1-310da80f7b66
Robinson, Suzanne
381aa349-a158-4001-86e8-20327d1b300d

Asare, Bernard Yeboah Asiamah, Thomas, Elizabeth, Affandi, Jacquita S., Schammer, Myles, Harris, Chris, Kwasnicka, Dominika, Powell, Daniel, Reid, Christopher M. and Robinson, Suzanne (2022) Multiple health-related behaviours among Fly-In Fly-Out workers in the mining industry in Australia: a cross-sectional survey during the COVID-19 pandemic. PLoS ONE, 17 (10), [e0275008]. (doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0275008).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Fly-In-Fly-Out (FIFO) workers travel to work at isolated locations, and rotate continuous workdays with leave periods at home, and such work practice is common in the offshore oil and gas and onshore mining industry worldwide. The COVID-19 pandemic and accompanying public health actions appear to have had a negative impact on several health-related behaviours among the general population. However, little is known about the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the health behaviours of FIFO workers, who have shown higher pre-pandemic rates of risky behaviours than the general population in Australia. This study examined the health-related behaviours of FIFO workers in the mining industry during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Methods: a descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted. FIFO workers from an Australian mining company who underwent COVID-19 screening between May and November 2020 completed an online survey about their regular health-related behaviours. The independent sample t-test and Pearson's chi-square test where appropriate were conducted to examine the differences between males and females for the behavioural outcomes.

Results: a total of 768 FIFO workers (633 males and 135 females) participated in the study. Prevalence of smoking was high (32%). Males smoked more cigarettes per day than females (15.2±7.0 vs 13.1±7.1, p = .174). Most participants (74.7%) drank alcohol on more than two days per week. Compared to females, more males (20.2% vs 8.0%) consumed alcohol at short-term harmful levels (p = .010). About a third (34.4%) of the workers (33.5% of males and 38.5% of females, p = .264) engaged in inadequate moderate-vigorous exercises/physical activity. About a third (33.1%) of workers (33.7% of males and 30.4% of females; p = .699) had multiple risk behaviours.

Conclusions: prevalence of multiple risk behaviours was high. Interventions aimed at the prevention of risky health-related behaviours should target the different behavioural patterns and may require emphasis on gender-informed techniques particularly when addressing alcohol consumption.

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Accepted/In Press date: 8 September 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 27 October 2022
Published date: 27 October 2022

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 511483
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/511483
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: 1aa71514-40aa-4965-8829-23e7212ca1cb
ORCID for Daniel Powell: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4995-6057

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Date deposited: 18 May 2026 16:31
Last modified: 19 May 2026 02:13

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Contributors

Author: Bernard Yeboah Asiamah Asare
Author: Elizabeth Thomas
Author: Jacquita S. Affandi
Author: Myles Schammer
Author: Chris Harris
Author: Dominika Kwasnicka
Author: Daniel Powell ORCID iD
Author: Christopher M. Reid
Author: Suzanne Robinson

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