1. Prevalence of Neck Pain and Associated Factors with Personal Characteristics, Physical Workloads and Psychosocial among Male Rubber Workers in FELDA Settlement Malaysia
- Author
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Anita Binti Abd Rahman, Mohd Yusoff Adon, Syed Tajuddin Syed Hassan, Chow Li Shan, and Kamal Bin Ismail
- Subjects
Working hours ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Posture ,Workload ,Repetitive motion ,Health problems ,Risk Factors ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Prevalence ,Medicine ,Humans ,Binary logistic regression analysis ,Physical workloads ,Aged ,Job content ,Neck pain ,Chi-Square Distribution ,Neck Pain ,Rubber workers ,business.industry ,Musculoskeletal symptoms ,Malaysia ,General Medicine ,Articles ,Middle Aged ,Stratified sampling ,Agricultural Workers' Diseases ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Logistic Models ,Physical therapy ,Rubber ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Psychosocial ,Job insecurity - Abstract
Rubber tapping processes posed potential risk of various health problems among rubber workers. It ranges from simple musculoskeletal aches to more serious and complicated structural damage to bone, muscles, tendons and nerves of musculoskeletal system. These health problems might be linked directly to the arduous demands of farm labor. Objectives: A cross-sectional study was conducted to determine the prevalence of neck pain (NP) and musculoskeletal symptoms (MSS) and its association with personal characteristics, physical workloads and psychosocial factors among rubber workers. Methods: Stratified random sampling method was adopted and a total of 419 rubber workers in FELDA’s scheme Malaysia participated in this study. Data was collected through face to face interview using modified Standardized Nordic Questionnaire (SNQ) and Job Content Questionnaire (JCQ). Results: The results revealed the prevalence of NP was 59.9% and weak correlation with age (?= -0.184, p = 0.001) and a positive weak correlation with working hours per day (?= 0.099, p = 0.043) significantly. All physical workloads (neck flexion or rotation, awkward postures, repetitive motion and static postures) had significant weak to moderate positive correlation with NP ( p
- Published
- 2012