Distribution of Number, Location of Pain and Comorbidities, and Determinants of Work Limitations among Firefighters.

IF 1.5 Q3 REHABILITATION Rehabilitation Research and Practice Pub Date : 2020-11-08 eCollection Date: 2020-01-01 DOI:10.1155/2020/1942513
Goris Nazari, Temitope A Osifeso, Joy C MacDermid
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Abstract

Introduction: The unique demands of firefighting results in acute, recurrent, or chronic pain complications. We aimed to describe the percentage distribution of number and location of painful sites among FFs and determine whether work limitations differed based on the number or location of painful sites, age, and/or sex.

Methods: About 325 firefighters completed a work limitation questionnaire (WLQ-26) and a checklist to indicate painful regions of the body using either a paper format or an online survey. A one-way ANOVA was employed to analyze the transformed work limitation scores; this was a two-sided test with a significance level of <0.05, to determine if work limitations differed among firefighters based on the number or location of painful sites, age, and/or sex.

Results: The data analyzed consisted of 325 (men = 216, women = 109) FFs in total. The percentage distribution of the number of painful sites in our study cohort was 43% no pain, 17% one painful site, 19% two painful sites, and 21% three or more painful sites. The percentage distribution of the locations of painful sites was 43% no pain, 41% spine, 9% lower extremity, and 7% upper extremity. An estimated 31% of FFs (n = 102) reported non-MSK comorbidities with 23% (n = 76) reporting at least one non-MSK comorbidity and 8% (n = 26) reported having two or more comorbidities. FFs > 45 years of age experienced more physical work limitations than FFs ≤ 45years (mean difference: 0.74/10; 95% CI .19-1.29; p = 0.008).

Conclusions: The majority of firefighters reported having at least one painful site and indicated the spine as the most common painful location. Age, the number of painful sites, and location of pain were identified as a potential contributor to physical/mental and work output limitations.

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消防员中疼痛和并发症的数量、部位分布以及工作限制的决定因素。
介绍:消防工作的特殊要求会导致急性、复发性或慢性疼痛并发症。我们旨在描述消防员疼痛部位的数量和位置的百分比分布,并确定工作限制是否因疼痛部位的数量或位置、年龄和/或性别而有所不同:约 325 名消防员填写了一份工作限制问卷(WLQ-26),并通过纸质或在线调查的方式填写了一份检查表,以指出身体的疼痛部位。采用单因素方差分析来分析转换后的工作限制得分;这是一个双侧检验,显著性水平为 结果:所分析的数据包括 325 名(男性 216 名,女性 109 名)FFs。在我们的研究队列中,疼痛部位数量的百分比分布为:43%无疼痛,17%有一个疼痛部位,19%有两个疼痛部位,21%有三个或更多疼痛部位。疼痛部位的分布比例为:43%无疼痛,41%脊柱,9%下肢,7%上肢。据估计,31% 的 FFs(102 人)报告患有非多发性硬化症合并症,其中 23%(76 人)报告患有至少一种非多发性硬化症合并症,8%(26 人)报告患有两种或两种以上合并症。年龄大于 45 岁的消防员比年龄小于 45 岁的消防员受到更多的身体工作限制(平均差异:0.74/10;95% CI .19-1.29;P = 0.008):大多数消防员表示至少有一个疼痛部位,并指出脊柱是最常见的疼痛部位。年龄、疼痛部位的数量和疼痛的位置被认为是导致身体/精神和工作产出受限的潜在因素。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
16
审稿时长
19 weeks
期刊介绍: Rehabilitation Research and Practice is a peer-reviewed, Open Access journal that publishes original research articles, review articles, and clinical studies in all areas of physical medicine and rehabilitation. The journal focuses on improving and restoring functional ability and quality of life to those with physical impairments or disabilities. In addition, articles looking at techniques to assess and study disabling conditions will be considered.
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