Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 22 segundos...
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

The impact of tool selection on back and wrist injury risk in tying steel reinforcement bars: a single case experiment

Helen Lingard    
Isaac Selva Raj    
Noel Lythgo    
Olga Troynikov    
Chris Fitzgerald    

Resumen

The paper explores the risk of work-related musculoskeletal injury in tying steel reinforcement bars. Three tools are compared to determine the extent to which ergonomic tools can reduce the risk of injury to the back and wrist in steel-tying. A whole body system of wearable sensors was used to measure biomechanical risk in tying. Three tools were assessed to determine their impact on the risk of work-related musculoskeletal injury when used at different heights. These were: a conventional pincer-cutting tool; a power-driven tying tool, and a long handled stapler tool.No tool was found to work best in all situations. The long handled stapler tool significantly reduced trunk inclination when used from ground to shoulder height, but produced higher trunk extension (backward bending) when used above shoulder height. The power tying tool did not reduce the need to bend when working at lower work heights. The power-tying tool produced significantly lower peak wrist flexion values compared to the conventional pincer-cutter tool at all work heights except overhead. The power tying tool involved significantly lower levels of wrist rotation than the conventional pincer-cutter tool at all work heights above knee level.Many assessments of ergonomic risk factors in construction rely on observational methods. The use of small, lightweight wearable sensors permits the objective measurement of biomechanical risk factors for work-related musculoskeletal injury, as well as providing objective performance data that can be used in the design and selection of task-specific tools. Our analysis of work by height also provides insight into the way in which risk factors and reduction opportunities afforded by different tools vary depending on the height at which work is to be performed.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Chen Xia, Christian Eduardo Verdonk Gallego, Adrián Fabio Bracero, Víctor Fernando Gómez Comendador and Rosa María Arnaldo Valdés    
This paper investigates the impact of trajectory predictor performance on the encounter probability generated by an adaptive conflict detection tool and examines the flexibility of the tool dependent on its adjustable thresholds, using historical radar t... ver más
Revista: Aerospace

 
Kristina Mazur, Mischa Saleh and Mirko Hornung    
Early and rapid environmental assessment of newly developed aircraft concepts is eminent in today?s climate debate. This can shorten the decision-making process and thus accelerate the entry into service of climate-friendly technologies. A holistic appro... ver más
Revista: Aerospace

 
R. J. Roosien, M. N. A. Lim, S. M. Petermeijer and W. F. Lammen    
To reduce the carbon footprint of transport, policymakers are simultaneously stimulating cleaner vehicles and more sustainable mobility choices, such as a shift to rail for short-haul flights within Europe. The purpose of this study is to determine the c... ver más
Revista: Aerospace

 
Pietro Vivalda and Marco Fioriti    
The growing environmental public awareness and the consequential pressure on every industrial field has made environmental impact assessment increasingly important in the last few years. In this scope, the most established tool used in the specialized li... ver más
Revista: Aerospace

 
Mohammad Hmoud, Hadeel Swaity, Nardin Hamad, Omar Karram and Wajeeh Daher    
Artificial intelligence has been attracting the attention of educational researchers recently, especially ChatGPT as a generative artificial intelligence tool. The context of generative artificial intelligence could impact different aspects of students? ... ver más
Revista: Information