| Literature DB >> 31623104 |
Robin Orr1,2, Vinicius Simas3,4, Elisa Canetti5,6, Ben Schram7,8.
Abstract
Firefighters, along with other tactical personnel, are at a high risk of work-related physical injury above that of the private sector. The aim of this critical narrative review was to identify, critically appraise and synthesise key findings from recent literature investigating firefighting musculoskeletal injuries to inform injury reduction programs. The methodological approach (search terms, databases, etc.) was registered with PROSPERO and reported following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. Study quality was assessed using the Downs and Black checklist with scores graded according to the Kennelly grading system. Levels of evidence were ranked according to the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council. Of the 8231 studies identified, 17 met the criteria for inclusion. The methodological quality of the studies was 'fair' with a level of evidence of III-2. Reported injury rates ranged from 9% to 74% with the lower extremities and back the leading aggregated bodily sites of injury. Sprains and strains were the leading nature of musculoskeletal injury, often caused by slips, trips and falls, although muscle bending, lifting and squatting or muscle stressing were also prevalent. This review may inform injury reduction strategies and given that injuries reported in firefighters are similar to those of other tactical populations, safety processes to mitigate injuries may be of benefit across the tactical spectrum.Entities:
Keywords: firefighter; fireman; injury; occupational health; tactical
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31623104 PMCID: PMC6843477 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16203931
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Details of literature search: databases used and search terms (completed on 08 July 2019).
| Database | Search Terms |
|---|---|
| PUBMED | (firefighter OR firefighters OR “fire fighter” OR “fire fighters” OR “Firefighters” [Mesh] OR “first responder” OR “first responders” OR “emergency responder” OR “emergency responders” OR “Emergency Responders” [Mesh] OR “fire and rescue” OR “smoke jumpers” OR fireman OR firemen) AND (injury OR injuries OR “Wounds and Injuries” [Mesh]) |
| CINAHL | (firefighter OR firefighters OR “fire fighter” OR “fire fighters” OR (MM “Firefighters+”) OR “first responder” OR “first responders” OR “emergency responder” OR “emergency responders” OR “fire and rescue” OR “smoke jumpers” OR fireman OR firemen) AND (injury OR injuries OR (MM “Wounds and Injuries+”)) |
| EMBASE | (‘firefighter’/exp OR firefighter OR firefighters OR ‘fire fighter’/exp OR ‘fire fighter’ OR ‘fire fighters’/exp OR ‘fire fighters’ OR ‘firefighters’/exp OR ‘firefighters’ OR ‘first responder’ OR ‘first responders’ OR ‘emergency responder’/exp OR ‘emergency responder’ OR ‘emergency responders’/exp OR ‘emergency responders’ OR ‘fire and rescue’ OR ‘smoke jumpers’ OR ‘fireman’/exp OR fireman OR firemen) AND (‘injury’/exp OR injury OR ‘injuries’/exp OR injuries OR ‘wounds and injuries’/exp) |
| COCHRANE | (firefighter OR firefighters OR “fire fighter” OR “fire fighters” OR [mh Firefighters] OR “first responder” OR “first responders” OR “emergency responder” OR “emergency responders” OR [mh “Emergency Responders”] OR “fire and rescue” OR “smoke jumpers” OR fireman OR firemen) AND (injury OR injuries OR [mh “Wounds and Injuries”]) |
| SCOPUS | ( TITLE-ABS-KEY(“firefighter”) OR TITLE-ABS-KEY(“firefighters”) OR TITLE-ABS-KEY(“fire fighter”) OR TITLE-ABS-KEY(“fire fighters”) OR INDEXTERMS(“Firefighters”) OR TITLE-ABS-KEY(“first responder”) OR TITLE-ABS-KEY(“first responders”) OR TITLE-ABS-KEY(“emergency responder”) OR TITLE-ABS-KEY(“emergency responders”) OR INDEXTERMS(“Emergency Responders”) OR TITLE-ABS-KEY(“fire and rescue”) OR TITLE-ABS-KEY(“smoke jumpers”) OR TITLE-ABS-KEY(“fireman”) OR TITLE-ABS-KEY(“firemen”) ) AND ( TITLE-ABS-KEY(“injury”) OR TITLE-ABS-KEY(“injuries”) OR INDEXTERMS(“Wounds and Injuries”) ) |
| SPORTDISCUS | (firefighter OR firefighters OR “fire fighter” OR “fire fighters” OR “first responder” OR “first responders” OR “emergency responder” OR “emergency responders” OR OR “fire and rescue” OR “smoke jumpers” OR fireman OR firemen) AND (injury OR injuries OR DE “WOUNDS & injuries”) |
| PEDRO | “firefighter*” AND “injur*” |
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) flow diagram showing literature search, screening and eligibility results.
Inclusion and exclusion criteria and examples of excluded studies.
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| Study was focused on firefighters | Studies involving wildland firefighters, urban firefighters, career firefighters, volunteer firefighters, fire service personnel |
| Study examined musculoskeletal injuries occurring to, or in, a firefighter population while on duty | Studies examining musculoskeletal injuries, musculoskeletal disability, injury epidemiology, injury rates, injury incidence |
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| Study involved participants who were not firefighters | Studies involving emergency medical responders, first responders, or other population, without data specific for firefighters |
| Study included only injuries that were not musculoskeletal injuries while on duty | Studies which only examined occupational injuries without data for musculoskeletal injuries, or studies which examined, recreational injuries, sporting injuries, fatalities, chemical hazards, mortality, homicide, suicide, mental illness |
| Review article, or study reported as an abstract only |
Databases and search results prior to screening and removal of duplicates.
| Database | Identified Studies ( |
|---|---|
| PUBMED | 2641 |
| CINAHL | 772 |
| EMBASE | 3033 |
| COCHRANE | 87 |
| SCOPUS | 1562 |
| SPORTDISCUS | 132 |
| PEDRO | 4 |
Key information regarding the design, aims, data sources, critical appraisal score and levels of evidence of each included study.
| Authors (Year) and [Reference] | Title | Aim/Objective/Hypothesis | Study Design | Data Collection Method | Downs and Black Score | Level of Evidence * |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Britton et al. (2013) [ | Epidemiology of injuries to wildland firefighters | Examine nonfatal wildland firefighter injuries reported to the US Department of Interior (DOI) from 2003 to 2007. | Retrospective Cohort | Database | 70% | III-2 |
| Campbell (2018) [ | US Firefighter Injuries on the Fireground, 2010–2014 | Profile US firefighter injuries occurring on the fireground from 2010 to 2014. | Retrospective Cohort | Database | 45% | III-2 |
| Frost et al. (2015) [ | Firefighter injuries are not just a fireground problem | Characterise the injuries sustained by members of a large Canadian metropolitan fire department over a 5-year span (2007–2011) | Retrospective Cohort | Database | 50% | III-2 |
| Frost et al. (2016) [ | The cost and distribution on firefighter injuries in a large Canadian Fire Department | Categorise the cost of injuries filed in 2012 by firefighters from a large department by job duty, injury type, body part affected, and the general motion pattern employed at the time of injury. | Retrospective Cohort | Database | 60% | III-2 |
| Glazner (1996) [ | Factors related to injury of shiftwork fire fighters in the Northeastern United States | Identify factors involved in injuries sustained by fire fighters in three different municipal fire departments. | Retrospective Cohort | Database | 60% | III-2 |
| Hong et al. (2012) [ | Occupational Injuries, Duty Status, and Factors Associated With Injuries Among Firefighters | Assess the type of occupational injuries, duty status, and factors associated with injuries among firefighters. | Cross-sectional | Self-report/Internet-based survey | 60% | IV |
| Katsavouni et al. (2014) [ | The type and causes of injuries in firefighters | Investigate the nature and causes of occupational injuries in firefighters. | Cross-sectional | Self-report | 55% | IV |
| Magnetti et al. (1999) [ | Injuries to Volunteer Fire Fighters in West Virginia | Describe the distribution of occupational injuries to volunteer fire fighters (VFFs) by demographic characteristics, presenting history, time, and geographic location, using the West Virginia State Worker’s Compensation database. | Retrospective Cohort | Database | 50% | III-2 |
| Marsh et al. (2018) [ | Nonfatal Injuries to Firefighters Treated in U.S. Emergency Departments, 2003–2014 | Enhance current knowledge by providing national estimates of nonfatal injuries to firefighters treated in US emergency departments | Retrospective Cohort | Database | 55% | III-2 |
| Moody et al. (2019) [ | Descriptive analysis of injuries and illnesses self-reported by wildland firefighters | Understand types of injuries and illnesses wildland firefighters (WLFFs) sustain during the fire season. | Cross-sectional | Web-based self-reported questionnaire | 75% | IV |
| Poplin et al. (2012) [ | Beyond the fireground: injuries in the fire service | Explore injuries not only on the fireground but also during other fire service activities. | Retrospective Cohort | Database | 55% | III-2 |
| Seabury and McLaren (2012) [ | The Frequency, Severity, and Economic Consequences of Musculoskeletal Injuries to Firefighters in California | # Describe the average frequency and severity of work-related musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs) experienced by firefighters in California. | Retrospective Cohort | Database | 20% | III-2 |
| Szubert and Sobala (2002) [ | Work-related injuries among firefighters: sites and circumstances | Determine the injury ratio, causes and duration of temporal work disability from on-duty injuries among firefighters, taking into account the site and circumstances of their occurrence. | Retrospective Cohort | Database | 55% | III-2 |
| Taylor et al. (2015) [ | A Retrospective Evaluation of Injuries to Australian Urban Firefighters (2003 to 2012): Injury Types, Locations, and Causal Mechanisms | Evaluate injury trends within Australian firefighters. | Retrospective Cohort | Database | 50% | III-2 |
| Walton et al. (2003) [ | Cause, Type, and Workers’ Compensation Costs of Injury to Fire Fighters | A better understanding of the costs of injury to firefighters, and how those costs relate to the cause and the nature of those injuries can help inform policy decisions regarding the occupational health of firefighters (Musich et.al., 2001). Such information can serve to document financial incentives to infuse dollars into firefighter injury prevention and suggest priority areas for further study. | Retrospective Cohort | Database | 55% | III-2 |
| Watkins et al. (2019) [ | Women Firefighters’ Health and Well-Being: An International Survey | Identify specific health and well-being issues that women firefighters may experience as part of their daily working practices. Issues identified from this under-represented population can drive future research, education, and strategy to guide safety and health practices. | Cross-sectiona | Self-report | 60% | IV |
| Yoon et al. (2016) [ | Characteristics of Workplace Injuries among Nineteen Thousand Korean Firefighters | Provide as comprehensive an evaluation as possible to aid in improving safety strategies for firefighters, as well as to improve their health and well-being. | Cross-sectional | Self-report | 85% | IV |
* National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) guidelines used to determine the level of evidence [26].
Injury definitions, participants and main findings from each included study.
| Authors [Reference] | Year | Title | Injury Definition | Participant Details | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Britton et al. [ | 2013 | Epidemiology of injuries to wildland firefighters | No Injury definition | # Over 200,000 wildland firefighters (USA) in the 5-year period from 2003 to 2007 | # Slips/trips/falls were the mechanism for almost half of all sprains and strains (49%) and fractures and dislocations (43%). |
| Campbell [ | 2018 | US Firefighter Injuries on the Fireground, 2010-2014 | No Injury definition | # 1,121,630 Firefighters from USA (2010–2014) | # Leading cause of injuries = overexertion or strain (26%) |
| Frost et al. [ | 2015 | Firefighter injuries are not just a fireground problem | A reportable injury was defined in accordance with the Occupational Health and Safety regulations for Alberta, namely medical treatment, restricted work duties or lost time. | # Calgary Fire Department (western Canada) | # Musculoskeletal disorders (MSD) = 845 (64% of all injuries, 2007-2011): |
| Frost et al. [ | 2016 | The cost and distribution on firefighter injuries in a large Canadian Fire Department | A reportable injury was defined in accordance with the Occupational Health and Safety regulations for Alberta, namely medical treatment, restricted work duties or lost time, which was defined as missing one or more shifts because of an occurrence. | # Calgary Fire Department (western Canada) | # Musculoskeletal disorders (MSD) = 159 (65% of all injuries): |
| Glazner [ | 1996 | Factors related to injury of shiftwork fire fighters in the Northeastern United States | No Injury definition | # 447 career fire fighters of 3 fire departments (USA) | # Sprains, strains, or pain = 16% |
| Hong et al. [ | 2012 | Occupational Injuries, Duty Status, and Factors Associated With Injuries Among Firefighters | No Injury definition | # 437 fire fighters from 34 fire departments (USA), from 2010 to 2011 | # Muscle strains/sprains = 212 (74.4%) |
| Katsavouni et al. [ | 2014 | The type and causes of injuries in firefighters | No Injury definition | # 3289 full-time firefighters (Greece) | # Lumbar injuries = 107 |
| Magnetti et al. [ | 1999 | Injuries to Volunteer Fire Fighters in West Virginia | No Injury definition | # Volunteer fire fighters (VFFs) of West Virginia (USA) | # Lacerations and contusions = 28.9% |
| Marsh et al. [ | 2018 | Nonfatal Injuries to Firefighters Treated in U.S. Emergency Departments, 2003-2014 | The term “injury” was used to refer to injuries, illnesses, and exposures | # USA | # Sprain/Strain = 34% |
| Moody et al. [ | 2019 | Descriptive analysis of injuries and illnesses self-reported by wildland firefighters | No Injury definition | # 284 wildland firefighters (WLFFs) (USA) | # Joint sprain = 25.4% |
| Poplin et al. [ | 2007 | Beyond the fireground: injuries in the fire service | A reportable injury is defined in accordance with Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) regulations (29 CFR, 1904.7) (i.e., medical treatment, restricted work time, or lost work time), in addition to any injury that occurred to specific body regions. The surveillance database includes internally documented injuries (i.e., those deemed non-OSHA reportable, but recorded in the Tucson Fire Department system), which had no immediate loss of job function or capabilities, but are documented in the event the injury later progresses to a point requiring a report and or treatment (e.g., due to cumulative or repeated trauma) | # Approximately 650 fire service personnel (USA), including firefighters, paramedics, engineers, inspectors, battalion chiefs | # Sprain, strain = 605 (67.1%) |
| Seabury and McLaren [ | 2012 | The Frequency, Severity, and Economic Consequences of Musculoskeletal Injuries to Firefighters in California | No Injury definition | # Firefighters from California | # Firefighters are 3.5 times more likely to suffer a workplace injury and 3.8 times more likely to suffer a work-related MSD than a private-sector worker. |
| Szubert and Sobala [ | 2002 | Work-related injuries among firefighters: sites and circumstances | No Injury definition | # 1503 firefighters from 29 fire stations in Poland | # 25% were on-duty: |
| Taylor et al. [ | 2015 | A Retrospective Evaluation of Injuries to Australian Urban Firefighters (2003 to 2012): Injury Types, Locations, and Causal Mechanisms | Work-related injuries were defined as physical and psychological (mental health) conditions that arose during, or as a consequence of, employment as a firefighter. | # 6998 Australian firefighters | # Joint and muscle sprains and strains = 66.5%: |
| Walton et al. [ | 2003 | Cause, Type, and Workers’ Compensation Costs of Injury to Fire Fighters | Injury was defined as any mild physical harm (e.g., bruises), or any major physical harm involving outpatient or inpatient treatment | # 13,680 firefighters (USA) | # Strains and sprains account for 38% of the |
| Watkins et al. [ | 2019 | Women Firefighters’ Health and Well-Being: An International Survey | No injury definition | # 840 women firefighters from 14 countries (UK, Ireland, North America, Australasia, mainland Europe) | # Musculoskeletal injuries, including work-related upper and lower limb and back injuries, were reported by 9–23% of women firefighters. |
| Yoon et al. [ | 2016 | Characteristics of Workplace Injuries among Nineteen Thousand Korean Firefighters | The occurrence of workplace injuries was defined when the injuries required hospital care: if the injuries did not require hospital care, they were not counted. These criteria were applied to all types of injuries and events including car accidents. | # 19,119 Korean firefighters | # Most prevalent = wound, cut, bleeding, bruise ( |
SD = standard deviation; MSD = musculoskeletal disorder; VFF = volunteer firefighter.
Figure 2Musculoskeletal injury prevalence, by study.