{"title":"Descriptive Epidemiology of Occupational Injuries among urban construction workers – an observation from Eastern India","authors":"Bidisa Sarkar, S. Kar, Ipsa Mohapatra, K. Sarkar","doi":"10.3126/ijosh.v13i2.48712","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Introduction\nBhubaneswar, Odisha, is seeing a boom in construction activities, with workers from remote areas coming for work. Poverty, and illiteracy, coupled with employment and regular payments make them oblivious to unsafe working conditions. Long hours of heavy work in bad postures affect their musculoskeletal system leading to work-related musculoskeletal injuries. This study aimed to understand the epidemiology of the above injuries among the construction workers in Bhubaneswar\nMethods\nIt was a work-site-based multistage cross-sectional study, where the sites engaging >=15 workers were selected randomly. A total of 520 workers (consented, >=21 years of age, and in this profession for at least 3 years) were recruited randomly. Data was collected by interviewing the study participants with the help of a pre-tested questionnaire focusing on sociodemographic profiles and relevant epidemiological variables related to occupational injury of urban construction workers. Data entry and analysis were done using SPSS version 20.\nResults\nOver 95% of the participants were heavy workers, 23.1% were laborers, 28.1% had < 10 years of experience, and 72.3% were satisfied with their job. A little more than 19% had work-related injuries in the last 3 months. Age, gender, alcohol abuse, better education, lesser work experience, skilled work and job dissatisfaction were found to be statistically significant when associated with workplace injuries. Multivariate analysis revealed only age and lesser duration of working experience in the construction industry were associated with an increase in occupational injuries.\nConclusion\nThis study found that younger age, less work experience, male gender, use of alcohol, nature of work and lack of job satisfaction, and a few other factors were associated with work-related injuries. Often their occupational health and injuries get overlooked. Employers should be primarily responsible for their health, safety, and well-being. Suitable legislation and proper implementation would probably facilitate this.","PeriodicalId":34250,"journal":{"name":"International Journal of Occupational Safety and Health","volume":"6 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-03-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"International Journal of Occupational Safety and Health","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3126/ijosh.v13i2.48712","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"Social Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction
Bhubaneswar, Odisha, is seeing a boom in construction activities, with workers from remote areas coming for work. Poverty, and illiteracy, coupled with employment and regular payments make them oblivious to unsafe working conditions. Long hours of heavy work in bad postures affect their musculoskeletal system leading to work-related musculoskeletal injuries. This study aimed to understand the epidemiology of the above injuries among the construction workers in Bhubaneswar
Methods
It was a work-site-based multistage cross-sectional study, where the sites engaging >=15 workers were selected randomly. A total of 520 workers (consented, >=21 years of age, and in this profession for at least 3 years) were recruited randomly. Data was collected by interviewing the study participants with the help of a pre-tested questionnaire focusing on sociodemographic profiles and relevant epidemiological variables related to occupational injury of urban construction workers. Data entry and analysis were done using SPSS version 20.
Results
Over 95% of the participants were heavy workers, 23.1% were laborers, 28.1% had < 10 years of experience, and 72.3% were satisfied with their job. A little more than 19% had work-related injuries in the last 3 months. Age, gender, alcohol abuse, better education, lesser work experience, skilled work and job dissatisfaction were found to be statistically significant when associated with workplace injuries. Multivariate analysis revealed only age and lesser duration of working experience in the construction industry were associated with an increase in occupational injuries.
Conclusion
This study found that younger age, less work experience, male gender, use of alcohol, nature of work and lack of job satisfaction, and a few other factors were associated with work-related injuries. Often their occupational health and injuries get overlooked. Employers should be primarily responsible for their health, safety, and well-being. Suitable legislation and proper implementation would probably facilitate this.
奥里萨邦布巴内斯瓦尔的建筑活动正在蓬勃发展,来自偏远地区的工人来这里工作。贫穷和文盲,加上就业和定期支付,使他们对不安全的工作条件视而不见。长时间以不良姿势繁重工作影响他们的肌肉骨骼系统,导致与工作有关的肌肉骨骼损伤。本研究旨在了解布巴那省建筑工人上述伤害的流行病学情况。方法采用基于工地的多阶段横断面研究方法,随机选取15名建筑工人的工地。随机招募520名员工(同意,>=21岁,从事该行业至少3年)。通过对研究对象的访谈收集数据,并采用预先测试的调查问卷,重点关注与城市建筑工人职业伤害相关的社会人口学概况和相关流行病学变量。数据录入和分析使用SPSS version 20。结果95%以上的人从事重体力劳动,23.1%的人从事体力劳动,28.1%的人工作年限< 10年,72.3%的人对自己的工作感到满意。19%多一点的人在过去3个月内因工作受伤。年龄、性别、酗酒、良好的教育、较少的工作经验、熟练的工作和对工作的不满被发现与工作场所伤害有关。多变量分析显示,只有年龄和较短的建筑行业工作经验与职业伤害的增加有关。结论本研究发现,年龄小、工作经验少、男性、使用酒精、工作性质和缺乏工作满意度以及其他一些因素与工伤有关。他们的职业健康和伤害往往被忽视。雇主应该对他们的健康、安全和福利负主要责任。适当的立法和适当的执行可能会促进这一点。