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Occupational stress and biomechanical risk in a high fashion clothing company. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates job stress among workers in a high fashion clothing company, focusing on upper limb biomechanical overload caused by repetitive and forceful manual activities.
  • The OCRA Checklist was used to analyze and partly reduce biomechanical risk, with 518 workers surveyed for anxiety, occupational stress, and symptom perception.
  • Findings indicated that while high-risk jobs were not prevalent (except cutting), there was significant job strain linked to low decision latitude, leading to increased perception of symptoms, suggesting a need for further analysis of musculoskeletal overload.

Article Abstract

Psychosocial discomfort may amplify job-related risk factors. The aim of this study is to evaluate job stress in a high fashion clothing company with upper limb biomechanical overload due to repetitive and forceful manual activities. Biomechanical risk was analyzed and in part reduced using the OCRA Check list. A total of 518 workers (433 females and 85 males) were investigated to determine anxiety (by STAI 1 and 2), occupational stress (using the Italian version of the Karasek Job Content Questionnaire) and perception of symptoms. Final biomechanical assessment did not reveal high risk jobs, except for cutting. Although the perception of anxiety and job insecurity was within the normal range, all the workers showed a high level of job strain (correlated with the perception of symptoms) due, probably, to very low decision latitude. It was suggested that job strain may increase the perception of symptoms. Moreover, the result of this study indicates that musculoskeletal overload has to be further analyzed since its low level is not in agreement with the level of discomfort due to the repetitive tasks.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/WOR-2012-0550-2966DOI Listing

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