1. Validity of self-assessed reports of occurrence and duration of occupational tasks.
- Author
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Unge J, Hansson GA, Ohlsson K, Nordander C, Axmon A, Winkel J, and Skerfving S
- Subjects
- Adult, Ergometry, Female, Household Work, Humans, Middle Aged, Office Management, Self-Assessment, Surveys and Questionnaires, Sweden, Workload, Occupations, Task Performance and Analysis
- Abstract
To obtain quantitative estimates of the physical workload in epidemiological and intervention studies of musculoskeletal disorders, there is a need to extend task based exposure data to job exposure profiles. For this purpose a work task diary was developed and evaluated. This was validated against direct observations of a day's work for twenty-two female office workers and twenty female hospital cleaners. There was a good agreement regarding the occurrence of the main tasks. However, the less time-consuming tasks were under-reported. Moreover, about two thirds of the changes between tasks were not reported. The difficulties of defining tasks that function as occupational entities seems to be a major reason for the lack of agreement. The underestimation of the duration of breaks/pauses was most pronounced for the cleaners. Still, the diary would be useful for the calculation of job exposure, by time-weighting task exposure data, when the tasks and/or their duration vary between days.
- Published
- 2005
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