The impact of manual patient handling on work ability: A cross-sectional study in a Brazilian hospital
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Abstract
Aim: To investigate the level of self-reported
work ability and its association with
manual patient handling in healthcare workers.
Design: Cross-sectional
study adhering to the Strengthening the Reporting of
Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) guidelines.
Methods: A total of 320 healthcare workers answered a self-administered
questionnaire
regarding manual patient handling, work ability, occupational factors, occurrence
of low back pain and sociodemographic and lifestyle factors from November
2016 to March 2017. The association between manual patient handling and low back
pain was analysed with Poisson regression models.
Results: The prevalence ratio of inadequate work ability was 43.42%. Manual patient
handling (PR 1.375, 95% CI 1.038–1.821),
bachelor education (PR 2.150, 95% CI
1.272–3.632),
less than bachelor education (PR 2.166, 95% CI 1.218–3.855),
seniority
(PR 1.049, 95% CI 1.024–1.086),
poor sleep quality (PR 1.425, 95% CI 1.13–1.796)
and
presence of low back pain (PR 2.003, 95% CI 1.314–3.052)
were all positively associated
with an inadequate work ability.
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Bibliographic citation
Bernardes, J. M., Spröesser Alonso, M., Gómez‐Salgado, J., Ruiz‐Frutos, C., García‐Navarro, E. B., & Dias, A. (2022). The impact of manual patient handling on work ability: A cross‐sectional study in a Brazilian hospital. In Nursing Open (Vol. 9, Issue 5, pp. 2304–2313). Wiley. https://doi.org/10.1002/nop2.1228














