| Literature DB >> 29522440 |
Janice Hegewald1, Wera Berge2, Philipp Heinrich3, Ronny Staudte4, Alice Freiberg5, Julia Scharfe6, Maria Girbig7, Albert Nienhaus8,9, Andreas Seidler10.
Abstract
The physical load ensuing from the repositioning and moving of patients puts health care workers at risk of musculoskeletal complaints. Technical equipment developed to aid with patient handling should reduce physical strain and workload; however, the efficacy of these aids in preventing musculoskeletal disorders and complaints is still unclear. A systematic review of controlled intervention studies was conducted to examine if the risk of musculoskeletal complaints and disorders is reduced by technical patient handling equipment. MEDLINE®/PubMed®, EMBASE®, Allied and Complementary Medicine Database (AMED), and Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL®) were searched using terms for nursing, caregiving, technical aids, musculoskeletal injuries, and complaints. Randomized controlled trials and controlled before-after studies of interventions including technical patient handling equipment were included. The titles and abstracts of 9554 publications and 97 full-texts were screened by two reviewers. The qualitative synthesis included one randomized controlled trial (RCT) and ten controlled before-after studies. A meta-analysis of four studies resulted in a pooled risk ratio for musculoskeletal injury claims (post-intervention) of 0.78 (95% confidence interval 0.68-0.90). Overall, the methodological quality of the studies was poor and the results often based on administrative injury claim data, introducing potential selection bias. Interventions with technical patient handling aids appear to prevent musculoskeletal complaints, but the certainty of the evidence according to GRADE approach ranged from low to very low.Entities:
Keywords: equipment and supplies; ergonomics; hospital; low back pain (LBP); moving and lifting patients; musculoskeletal diseases; occupational medicine; systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29522440 PMCID: PMC5877021 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph15030476
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Study inclusion criteria according to the PICO framework.
| PICO | Study Inclusion Criteria |
|---|---|
| Participants (P) | Labor force from the field of nursing exerting patient transfers; especially health care workers, therapists (physiotherapists, occupational therapists), as well as volunteer workers from the health care area, and caregiving relatives between the ages of 15 and 70 years. |
| Intervention (I) | Technical patient handling equipment (i.e., nursing beds, low nursing home beds, bed movers, mobile lifts, wall lifts, overhead lifts, ceiling lifts, day care chairs, or mechanical position change aids); as a solitary measure or as part of a multimodal intervention (e.g., combined with education, training, guidance, small assistive devices, etc.). |
| Comparison (C) | Health care and nursing settings lacking technical patient handling equipment. |
| Outcomes (O) | Complaints or disorders (self-reported disorders or pain assessed with any questionnaire e.g., Nordic, Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand (DASH), Oswestry), including acute presentations of debilitation and pain ensuing in conjunction with a patient handling maneuver (i.e., injuries), in the |
| Study design | Randomized controlled trials (RCT) and controlled before-after (CBA) studies |
Figure 1Flowchart depicting the literature identification process.
Study characteristics.
| Study, Year | Study Design (Follow-Up); Setting(s) | Participant Characteristics | Intervention(s) | Comparison | Outcomes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baldasseroni 2005 [ | CBA (1.5 years) | total employed at baseline | total employed at baseline | electromechanical lifts | no equipment provided | 12-month prevalence of low-back pain (number of episode categories) |
| Black 2011/Lim 2011 [ | CBA (two years) | characteristics of injured workers at hospitals A, B, and C (pre-/post-intervention) [ | Transfer, Lifting, and Repositioning (TLR) program | no injury prevention program, “standard occupational health and safety practice” | back injuries claims | |
| Dennerlein 2017 [ | CBA (one year) | random sample of employees in patient care units (with patient care duties) supervised by a nurse manager, employed in 2012, and working more than 20 h per week were surveyed: | hospital-wide safe patient handling and mobilisation program comprising: | employees of four units in the comparison hospital were offered a well-being intervention | three-month prevalence of low back pain (NordicQ) | |
| Engst 2005 [ | CBA (one year) | aged 19–60+ years | • installation of ceiling lift tracks in 75-bed extended care unit | 3 mechanical floor lifts, 1 sit-stander) were already available | raw number of claims for “lifting & transferring related injuries” and “repositioning related injuries” | |
| Evanoff 2003 [ | CBA (2–3 years) | age and sex distribution of intervention and comparison groups not reported | • 22 stand-up lifts (“EZ-Stand”) and 25 full-body lifts (“EZ-Lift”) distributed among the 36 intervention unit | compared with injury data from all hospital workers not provided with new technical patient handling equipment at each facility during the same time frame | musculoskeletal injury claims rate ratio (RR, 95% CI), post- vs. pre-intervention | |
| Fragala 2012 [ | CBA “pilot study” (one year) | age and sex distribution of intervention and comparison groups were not reported | “CASE program” c | no equipment provided | raw number of injury claims pre-/post-intervention | |
| Knibbe & Friele 1999 [ | CBA (one year) 20 teams of home care nurses working in Rotterdam, The Netherlands providing professional nursing care around the clock, seven days/week for patients living at home 8 intervention teams ( | avg. age 34.6 years (±8.8); | • 40 patient hoists provided | no special equipment provided | 12-month prevalence of back pain | |
| Li 2004 [ | CBA (seven months follow-up) three nursing units of a 111 bed community hospital in St. Louis (Missouri), USA (incl. medicine/surgery, intensive care, subacute care units) | health-care workers directly involved with patient handling | • 1 portable full body sling lift | compared with injury data from units not provided with new technical patient handling equipment during the same time frame (mechanical lifts were not available) | musculoskeletal injury claim rate ratio (RR, 95% CI), post- vs. pre-intervention | |
| Miller 2006 [ | CBA (1 year) | intervention ( | • ceiling lift tracking from beds to washrooms installed in all rooms; 6 portable ceiling lift motors purchased; 4 portable motors were purchased eight months post-intervention | no ceiling-lift tracking both the intervention and control facilities had 4 mechanical lifts prior to and during the intervention | raw number of injury claims pre-/post intervention | |
| Smedley 2003 [ | CBA (4–14 months d) | baseline questionnaire e | • manual-handling policy revised to “minimize unassisted patient handling and exposure to high-risk nursing tasks” | “Limited” steps to improve manual-handling training and use of patient-handling equipment was initiated by the control hospital management during the study period. | one-month prevalence of low back pain | |
| Yassi 2001 [ | 3-arm cluster RCT (one year) | 346 nurses and unit assistants | “Safe lifting” (Arm B) | “Usual practice” (Arm A) | musculoskeletal injury claim rate per 100,000 paid h |
a Numbers reported in publication were weighted due to oversampling. b “Intervention units were chosen based on … past injury rates, the expressed interest of nursing management, and perceived risk of injuries posed by different patient populations” [50]; c The CASE program is described as a five-step framework beginning with identification of high-risk activities and resident assessment. Intervention unit was selected based on past injury rates [51]; d Intervention began 18–28 months after baseline survey, and follow-up survey was 32 months after baseline [56]. e Study was restricted to women [56]. f Number of lifts provided depended on the unit’s patient population [57].
Figure 2Forest plot of studies reporting the relative risk estimates for all musculoskeletal injuries in intervention versus control groups post-intervention.
Figure 3Forest plot of post-intervention 12-month prevalence rate ratios for back-pain in intervention vs. control (reference) groups.
Summary of findings.
| Outcomes | No. of Participants (Studies) Follow-Up | Certainty of the Evidence | Relative Effect (95% CI) | Anticipated Absolute Effects | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Risk with Few or no Patient Transferring Aids | Risk Difference with Technical Aids (Range Based on 95% CI) | ||||
| musculoskeletal injuries (no site differentiation) | NR | ⨁ | RR 0.78 | Not computable due to unreported number of workers at risk in the studies | |
| 12-month prevalence of (low-)back pain | 607 | ⨁ | RR 0.78 | 45 per 100 | 10 fewer per 100 |
| repeated musculoskeletal injuries | 1480 | ⨁ | OR 0.62 | 22 per 100 | 7 fewer per 100 |
| cervical spine (neck) injuries | 1786 | ⨁ | One study found the percentage of injury claims involving the neck increased post-intervention in both the group receiving the intervention as well as the control group. The other study found the a nearly statistically significant protective post-intervention RR for neck/shoulder injury claims | ||
| shoulder pain | 261 | ⨁⨁ | The RCT reported a reduction in 1-week shoulder pain ratings at the 6- and 12-month follow-ups in the intervention group receiving technical aids to prevent strenuous lifting. A similar reduction in pain rating was not observed in the control group or in the second intervention arm receiving primarily small aids. Although the 1-week prevalence of work-related shoulder pain at the 6- and 12-month follow-ups was significantly lower in the second intervention arm receiving primarily small aids | ||
| The risk in the intervention group (and its 95% CI) is based on the assumed risk in the comparison group and the relative effect of the intervention (and its 95% CI) | |||||
| GRADE Working Group grades of evidence | |||||
a The study design was not randomized (controlled before and after study design). b The study design was not randomized (controlled before and after study design). One of the two studies reported significantly different prevalence rates prior to the intervention [52]. Both studies were subject to risk of bias due to lack of blinding [46,52]. c The confidence interval of the pooled risk estimate is wide. d The study participants and the researchers were not blinded.