Gobbo Stefano, Bullo Valentina, Favro Francesco, Pavan Davide, Doro Beatrice, Bortoletto Alessandro, De Palma Giuseppe, Sala Emma, Mattioli Stefano, Di Blasio Andrea, Bergamin Marco
Department of Medicine, University of Padova, Via Giustiniani, 2 - 35128 Padova, Italy; Gymhub S.r.l., Spin-off of the University of Padova, Via Nona Strada 4 - 35129 Padova, Italy.
Department of Medicine, University of Padova, Via Giustiniani, 2 - 35128 Padova, Italy.
Med Lav. 2025 Aug 4;116(4):16856. doi: 10.23749/mdl.v116i4.16856.
Work-related musculoskeletal disorders pose a significant burden on the population. The OCRA method plays a key role in assessing the risk associated with repetitive actions of the upper limbs. In this method, muscular force is evaluated based on the rate of perceived effort (RPE) reported by the worker, which can introduce subjective bias into the assessment. This study aims to determine whether testing the worker's handgrip strength can improve the accuracy of the force assessment in the OCRA method.
Handgrip strength was measured during the risk assessment process following the OCRA method. Data were divided into specific percentile ranks based on age, gender, height, and handedness.
903 workers from 43 different Italian companies were surveyed. There was a significant difference in handgrip strength percentiles stratified by report of an RPE > 2 and those without (p = 0.047). Additionally, significant differences were found in perceived effort rates (based on the OCRA method) among workers with different levels of stratified handgrip strength (dominant hand: p = 0.04, non-dominant hand: p = 0.02).
Workers performing repetitive upper limb actions at various strength levels experience different perceived effort rates during tasks. These findings suggest that measuring handgrip strength is a crucial component of risk assessments using the OCRA method. To date, this study's sample size is among the largest for this evaluation method; we believe these results could be a significant step forward in improving the risk assessment process for biomechanical overload.
与工作相关的肌肉骨骼疾病给人群带来了沉重负担。OCRA 方法在评估上肢重复动作相关风险方面发挥着关键作用。在该方法中,肌肉力量是根据工人报告的主观用力率(RPE)来评估的,这可能会给评估带来主观偏差。本研究旨在确定测试工人的握力是否能提高 OCRA 方法中力量评估的准确性。
在按照 OCRA 方法进行风险评估过程中测量握力。数据根据年龄、性别、身高和利手分为特定的百分位数等级。
对来自 43 家不同意大利公司的 903 名工人进行了调查。根据 RPE > 2 的报告分层的握力百分位数与未报告的之间存在显著差异(p = 0.047)。此外,在分层握力水平不同的工人中,主观用力率(基于 OCRA 方法)也存在显著差异(优势手:p = 0.04,非优势手:p = 0.02)。
在不同强度水平下执行重复性上肢动作的工人在任务过程中经历不同的主观用力率。这些发现表明,测量握力是使用 OCRA 方法进行风险评估时的一个关键组成部分。迄今为止,本研究的样本量是该评估方法中最大的之一;我们相信这些结果可能是在改进生物力学过载风险评估过程方面向前迈出的重要一步。