Literature DB >> 18704898

Prevention of traumatic nail gun injuries in apprentice carpenters: use of population-based measures to monitor intervention effectiveness.

Hester J Lipscomb1, James Nolan, Dennis Patterson, John M Dement.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Nail guns are responsible for a significant injury burden in residential construction. Risk, based on hours of work, is particularly high among apprentice carpenters due in part to more frequent exposure to tool use.
METHODS: Nail gun injuries were evaluated over 3 years among carpenters enrolled in two apprenticeship programs in the Midwest (2.3 million residential work hours observed) following initiation of training and a voluntary ANSI standard change calling for safer sequential triggers on framing nailers. Injury rates, based on hours of tool use, were calculated yearly. Rates and adjusted rate ratios were calculated with Poisson regression. Attributable risk percent (AR%) and population attributable risk (PAR%) were calculated yearly for modifiable independent risk factors for injury including lack of training in tool use and type of trigger mechanism on tools being used.
RESULTS: As apprentices received training and safer trigger mechanisms became more widespread, injury rates decreased significantly (31%). While school training and hands-on mentoring were both important, injury rates were lowest among apprentices who received both. Although injury rates changed over the observation period, the relative risk comparing trigger mechanisms did not; contact trip triggers consistently carried a twofold risk.
CONCLUSIONS: Although training and safer trigger use both increased, because of the relative prevalence of training and trigger exposures in this population, the engineering solution consistently had the potential to make more difference in population risk. Our findings demonstrate the utility of observational methods including measures of population-based risk in monitoring intervention effectiveness and making recommendations that lead to injury reduction. Published 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18704898      PMCID: PMC2574677          DOI: 10.1002/ajim.20628

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Ind Med        ISSN: 0271-3586            Impact factor:   2.214


  14 in total

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Authors:  H J Lipscomb; J M Dement; V McDougall; J Kalat
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Authors:  Hester J Lipscomb; John M Dement; Leiming Li; James Nolan; Dennis Patterson
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6.  How much time is safety worth? A comparison of trigger configurations on pneumatic nail guns in residential framing.

Authors:  Hester J Lipscomb; James Nolan; Dennis Patterson; Dimitrios Makrozahopoulos; Kristen L Kucera; John M Dement
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7.  Industrial nail gun injuries.

Authors:  R F Edlich; K A Silloway; G T Rodeheaver; R F Morgan; K Birk; J G Thacker
Journal:  Compr Ther       Date:  1986-11

8.  Pneumatic nailgun injuries to the knee.

Authors:  J le Nobel; P C Wing
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9.  Nail gun injury to the heart.

Authors:  K W Kizer; H A Boone; E Heneveld; J R Orozco
Journal:  J Trauma       Date:  1995-03

10.  Systematic reviews of injury-prevention strategies for occupational injuries: an overview.

Authors:  F P Rivara; D C Thompson
Journal:  Am J Prev Med       Date:  2000-05       Impact factor: 5.043

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2.  A Biomechanical Assessment of Hand/Arm Force with Pneumatic Nail Gun Actuation Systems.

Authors:  Brian D Lowe; James Albers; Stephen D Hudock
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3.  Residential building stakeholders' attitudes and beliefs regarding nail gun injury risks and prevention.

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Review 4.  Interventions to prevent injuries in construction workers.

Authors:  Henk F van der Molen; Prativa Basnet; Peter Lt Hoonakker; Marika M Lehtola; Jorma Lappalainen; Monique Hw Frings-Dresen; Roger Haslam; Jos H Verbeek
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