Company Representatives’ Experiences of Occupational Health Surveillance for Workers Exposed to Hand-Intensive Work: A Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Musculoskeletal Disorders and Occupational Health Surveillance
2. Methods
2.1. Company Selection
2.2. Study Informants
2.3. Study Context
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Model Components
3.1.1. Identification of Hand-Intensive Work
3.1.2. Exposure Assessment of Work
The Expert Validity
“It feels good to have the view from an outsider. You easily get blind to flaws at home. One does not really see the risks as an outsider does, so I think it has been valuable.”(Representative from company 9)
Increased Risk Awareness and Workplace Learning
“We never thought that we could get work related disorders in the same way as those with heavier work. But even though we work with lighter products, we have a high risk, and that has not been so obvious until now. And that is really good!”(Representative from company 8)
“Some of these models were new to us; it was the first time so to speak. So, it becomes like an educational part also.”(Representative from company 5)
3.1.3. Screening and Clinical Examination
“The concept hand-intensive is a bit misleading, I think, if you look at the clinical examinations and the discomforts, you do not have immediate pain in your hands.”(Representative from company 5)
“…You find that you have problems there; it is almost too late anyway, but at least it is so that more people will manage in the future... You might find if it is work-related and if so what we should do to avoid it tomorrow...”(Representative from company 7)
3.1.4. Feedback
Structure and Presentation of Feedback
“You do not need to know what all of these assessment tools are called and what numbers they have resulted in. But what is it that they have seen and what are we supposed to do. A little more straight forward!”(Representative from company 3)
Feedback—Valuable for Dissemination
3.2. Facilitating Factors and Barriers for the Execution of the Model
3.2.1. Planning and Preparation
3.2.2. Communication and Roles
“I think [it had been helpful] that steering it up a bit more in the beginning and also, you might have had some regular meetings as well.”(Representative from company 2)
“...in the communication, the language… there was a little to begin with, but when that was resolved, then there was like no weirdness but it worked well after that. So, that was exactly it and it is probably these small cultural differences we have that you have to work a little with.”(Representative from company 9)
“Invest in information before, during, after, get a group that becomes responsible for this, and that it will result in something so that you are willing to take action based on what the results show.”(Representative from company 10)
3.2.3. Collaboration
3.2.4. Outer and Inner Contextual Factors
“It has also obviously made it easier to have a head of department who actually wants to do this, because otherwise it is very difficult to carry out this in different departments.”(Representative from company 10)
4. Discussion
Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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No. | Organization Size (n of Employees) | Intervention Work Group Size (m/f) | Project Group | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Company Representatives | Ergonomist | |||||
Title | Work Experience in Current Role (Years) | OHS a-Provider | Work Experience in Ergonomics (Years) | |||
1 | Large > 250 | 12 (6/6) | First line manager | 1 | In-house | 27 |
HSE manager | 2 | |||||
Safety representative b | 2 | |||||
2 | Medium > 50 | 11 (0/11) | Central HSE manager | 3 | External | 5 |
Local manager | 20 | |||||
Safety representative | 28 | |||||
3 | Large > 250 | 7 (7/0) | First line manager | 20 | External | 9 |
First-line manager | 20 | |||||
Manager | 7 | |||||
4 | Large > 250 | 26 (10/12) | First line manager | 1 | External | 24 |
First-line manager b | 12 | |||||
First-line manager | - | |||||
HSE manager | - | |||||
HSE manager | - | |||||
Safety representatives | - | |||||
Safety representatives | - | |||||
Safety representatives | - | |||||
5 | Small < 50 | 11 (0/11) | Production manager | 3 | External | 6 |
First-line manager | 9 | |||||
First-line manager | 2 | |||||
Technology manager b | 4 | |||||
Safety representative | - | |||||
Safety representative | - | |||||
6 | Medium > 50 | 27 (11/16) | Manager | 12 | External | 20 |
First-line manager | - | |||||
7 | Medium > 50 | 22 (12/10) | Production manager | - | External | 14 |
Safety representative | - | |||||
8 | Medium > 50 | 7 (4/3) | Manager | - | External | 12 |
HR-manager | 24 | |||||
Safety representative | 34 | |||||
9 | Small < 50 | 11 (0/11) | CEO/founder | 4 | External | 34 |
HSE manager | 2 | |||||
Central safety representative | 5 | |||||
10 | Large > 250 | 21 (0/21) | HR-manager | 3 | External | 14 |
Production manager | - | |||||
First-line manager | 8 |
Model Components |
Identification of hand intensive work |
Exposure assessment of work |
The expert validity |
Increased risk awareness and workplace learning |
Screening and clinical examination |
Feedback |
Structure and presentation of feedback |
Valuable for dissemination |
Facilitating factors and barriers for the execution of the model |
Planning and preparation |
Communication and roles |
Outer and inner contextual factors |
Collaboration |
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Eliasson, K.; Dahlgren, G.; Hellman, T.; Lewis, C.; Palm, P.; Svartengren, M.; Nyman, T. Company Representatives’ Experiences of Occupational Health Surveillance for Workers Exposed to Hand-Intensive Work: A Qualitative Study. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 2018. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18042018
Eliasson K, Dahlgren G, Hellman T, Lewis C, Palm P, Svartengren M, Nyman T. Company Representatives’ Experiences of Occupational Health Surveillance for Workers Exposed to Hand-Intensive Work: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(4):2018. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18042018
Chicago/Turabian StyleEliasson, Kristina, Gunilla Dahlgren, Therese Hellman, Charlotte Lewis, Peter Palm, Magnus Svartengren, and Teresia Nyman. 2021. "Company Representatives’ Experiences of Occupational Health Surveillance for Workers Exposed to Hand-Intensive Work: A Qualitative Study" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 4: 2018. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18042018
APA StyleEliasson, K., Dahlgren, G., Hellman, T., Lewis, C., Palm, P., Svartengren, M., & Nyman, T. (2021). Company Representatives’ Experiences of Occupational Health Surveillance for Workers Exposed to Hand-Intensive Work: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(4), 2018. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18042018