Abstract

Spine posture during repetitive lifting is one of the main risk factors for low-back injuries in the occupational sector. It is thus critical to design appropriate intervention strategies for training workers to improve their posture, reducing load on the spine during lifting. The main approach to train safe lifting to workers has been educational; however, systematic reviews and meta-analyses have shown that this approach does not improve lifting movement nor reduces the risk of low back injury. One of the main limitations of this approach lies in the amount, quality and context of practice of the lifting movement. In this article, first we argue for integrating psychologically-grounded perspectives of practice design in the development of training interventions for safe lifting. Principles from deliberate practice and motor learning are combined and integrated. Given the complexity of lifting, a training intervention should occur in the workplace and invite workers to repeatedly practice/perform the lifting movement with the clear goal of improving their lifting-related body posture. Augmented feedback has a central role in creating the suitable condition for achieving such intervention. Second, we focus on spine bending as risk factor and present a pilot study examining the benefits and boundary conditions of different feedback modalities for reducing bending during lifting. The results showed how feedback modalities meet differently key requirements of deliberate practice conditions, i.e., feedback has to be informative, individualized and actionable. Following the proposed approach, psychology will gain an active role in the development of training interventions, contributing to finding solutions for a reduction of risk factors for workers.

Highlights

  • Low back injury and pain are conditions affecting a large portion of population worldwide, with deleterious psychosocial and economic consequences (Dagenais et al, 2008; Hoy et al, 2014)

  • This pilot study compared the effectiveness of auditory and tactile feedback in reducing lumbar spine flexion in a repetitive lifting task

  • Both feedback conditions promoted a reduction of lumbar spine flexion relative to a no-feedback control condition, and tactile was more effective than auditory (Table 2; Figure 4A)

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Summary

Introduction

Low back injury and pain are conditions affecting a large portion of population worldwide, with deleterious psychosocial and economic consequences (Dagenais et al, 2008; Hoy et al, 2014). The type and quality of performed movement are considered major risk factors (Marras et al, 1993; Coenen et al, 2013). High frequency of lifting movement exposes workers in specific occupational domains, such as construction and material handling at a higher risk of injury (Pope et al, 2002; Coenen et al, 2014; Parreira et al, 2018). Stresses on the spine and the injury risk factors vary according to certain aspects of the lifting movement. Training/teaching workers to improve their movement and decrease spine load is a critical preventative measure for low back pain and injury in the occupational sector

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