| Literature DB >> 29216849 |
Hélène Sultan-Taïeb1, Annick Parent-Lamarche2, Aurélie Gaillard3, Susan Stock4, Nektaria Nicolakakis4, Quan Nha Hong5, Michel Vezina6, Youssouph Coulibaly7, Nicole Vézina8, Diane Berthelette7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Work-related musculoskeletal disorders (WMSD) represent a major public health problem and economic burden to employers, workers and health insurance systems. This systematic review had two objectives: (1) to analyze the cost-benefit results of organizational-level ergonomic workplace-based interventions aimed at preventing WMSD, (2) to explore factors related to the implementation process of these interventions (obstacles and facilitating factors) in order to identify whether economic results may be due to a successful or unsuccessful implementation.Entities:
Keywords: Cost-benefit; Cost-effectiveness; Economic evaluation; Ergonomics; Intervention; Mixed methods; Occupation; Prevention; Systematic review; Work-related musculoskeletal disorders
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29216849 PMCID: PMC5721617 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-017-4935-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Quality assessment tool and average score obtained for each criterion by the included 9 studies
| Purpose of the study and nature of intervention | Average score for each criterion |
|---|---|
| 1. Were the objective and economic perspective of the evaluation clearly and explicitly stated? | 2.0 /2 |
| 2. Were workers’ exposure to intervention and involvement into intervention documented and appropriate? | 0.9 /2 |
| 3. Were changes implemented as intended? | 1.1 /2 |
| Study design and evaluation of intervention effectiveness | |
| 4. Did the study include a control group? | 0.6 /2 |
| 5. Were study participants randomly assigned to the control or intervention groups? If study participants were not randomly assigned, were workers’ baseline characteristics measured? | 0.9 /2 |
| 6. Were outcome indicators measured before and after the intervention? | 2.0 /2 |
| 7. Were contextual factors and co-interventions that could influence the results taken into account in the analysis or in the interpretation of the results? | 0.8 /2 |
| 8. Was the statistical analysis appropriate for measuring the effectiveness of the intervention? | 1.1 /2 |
| 9. Were study participants data paired before and after intervention? | 0.8 /2 |
| 10. Was the length of follow-up after the end of implementation of the intervention appropriate or justified by the authors? | 1.4 /2 |
| Features specific to economic evaluation | |
| 11. Did the study involve a comparison of competing alternatives and was there a comprehensive description of these alternatives? | 0.8 /2 |
| 12. Were all important and relevant costs and outcomes for each alternative identified and measured in appropriate physical units, given the evaluation perspective? | 1.7 /2 |
| 13. Was the method used for cost assessment explicitly stated and justified? | 1.4 /2 |
| 14. Was an incremental analysis of costs and outcomes of alternatives performed? | 0.8 /2 |
| 15. Were all important variables, whose values are uncertain, appropriately subjected to sensitivity analysis or presented with confidence intervals? | 0.6 /2 |
| 16. Did the presentation and discussion of study results include all issues of concern? | 1.4 /2 |
| 17. Did the study discuss the generalizability of the results to other settings and populations? | 0.2 /2 |
| 18. Were costs and outcomes that occur in the future discounted to their present value? | 0.2 /2 |
Average score calculated as the average of the scores obtained by the 9 included studies for each criterion (if all studies get a score of 2 for criterion 1, then the average score of this criterion is 2). Studies could get a score of 0 or 1 for criterion 18. The average score for this criterion was multiplied by 2 in Table 1 to be comparable to the other criteria
Criteria for levels of evidence
| Level of evidence | Minimum criteria |
|---|---|
| Strong | 3 high quality studies, agree on the same findings |
| Moderate | 2 high quality studies agree or 1 high quality and 2 medium quality studies agree |
| Limited | 1 high quality study or 2 medium quality studies agree |
| Mixed | Findings from medium and high quality studies are contradictory |
| Insufficient | No high quality study, only 1 medium quality study or any number of low quality studies |
Source: Adapted from Tompa et al. (2009, 2010)
Synthesis, integration of quantitative and qualitative data for each type of intervention
| Intervention type, Level of evidence for economic results | Cost-beneficial? (reference to economic article) | Factors in favour of success of intervention | Factors in favour of failure of intervention |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lifting equipment for patients | Yes [ | • Strong support from nurses, supervisors, co-workers, and patients | • Low adequacy to workers’ needs for repositioning tasks |
| Participatory ergonomic intervention | No [ | • High satisfaction among steering groups members | • Limited dose delivered and dose received of fully implemented ergonomic measures |
| Yes [ | • Strong management support for the program | • Low direct participation of workers | |
| Work style intervention and/or physical activity | Yes (Work style, WS) | • High participation of workers to WS (attendance to meetings) | • Lower participation of workers to WSPA (attendance to meetings) |
| Workload and empowerment | No and yes | • High dose delivered (except for physical activity training). | • Low dose received |
Fig. 1PRISMA Flow Diagram (Mohrer, 2009)