Injuries and Illness

6 Strategies for Reducing Overexertion Risks

Many employers probably think their employees don’t work hard enough. But the fact is that some people who do physically demanding work may be working too hard and putting themselves at risk of injuries from overexertion.

Overexertion injuries are costly because there are so many of them and because they often involve days away from work. Estimates place the total cost to employers at over $10 billion annually.

Another important fact about overexertion injuries is that they are preventable. But it takes training, positive feedback and correction, and employee involvement and cooperation to make a prevention program work.

Here are some suggestions for reducing overexertion injuries in your organization from an article entitled “The High Cost of Overexertion Injuries: Guidance for Retailers” (Retail Merchandiser, January/February 2009), written by
Barbara Mulhern and Vern Putz Anderson. Anderson is also one of the authors of the Applications Manual for the Revised NIOSH Lifting Equation (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services).

Although the article is aimed at the retail industry, the advice applies equally well to any workplace where employees are at risk of overexerting. These are the authors’ recommendations, which they gathered from NIOSH and other sources:

  • Identify overexertion risks. Once you’ve pinpointed the risks, you can modify workstations, job procedures, and the work environment to minimize the risks. The authors give examples: storing heavy items low to avoid excessive reaching and strain; reducing the depth of shelves to reduce overreaching; and modifying the work environment to reduce the need for twisting, bending, and other awkward postures.
  • Provide lifting aids. Manual and powered lifting aids reduce the strain on human bodies and greatly reduce the risk of overexertion in many material handling tasks.

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  • Prohibit solo lifting of heavy loads. The authors recommend a 50-pound limit for solo lifting. More than that and employees should be required to get help or use a lifting aid. According to Mulhern and Anderson, “Lifting or carrying loads that weigh 50 pounds or more increases a person’s risk for a serious back injury.”
  • Include lifting requirements in job descriptions. The authors also advise spelling out any lifting requirements right in the job description so that these requirements will be taken into account when hiring new workers.
  • Require frequent short breaks. A study conducted at Ohio State University and funded by NIOSH indicates that workers who do a lot of lifting should take frequent breaks to relax tired, tense muscles and reduce the risk of injury—particularly back injury.
  • Encourage early reporting of overexertion injuries. “Early treatment for an employee back injury or other overexertion-related injury can reduce the risk of recurrence and reduce your workers’ compensation claims costs,” say Mulhern and Anderson.

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