Abstract

Brazil was rated the fourth leading producer and exporter of pork meat in the world. The aim of this study was to evaluate the temperature of the hands of pig slaughterhouse workers and its relation to the thermal sensation of the hands and the use of a cutting tool. The study included 106 workers in a pig slaughterhouse. An infrared camera FlirThermaCAM E320 (Flir Systems, Wilsonville, OR, USA) was used to collect the images of the dorsal and palmar surfaces of both hands. A numerical scale was used to obtain the thermal sensation. Chi-square test, Pearson correlation and Student’s t test or Wilcoxon were used (p ≤ 0.05). The majority of workers felt cold in the hands (66%) and workers who used the knife felt the coldest. There was an association between the thermal sensation and the use of knife (p = 0.001). Workers who used the tool showed correlation between the thermal sensation and the temperatures of the left fingers, with a difference between the temperatures of the right and left hands of those who used the knife (p ≤ 0.05). The hands (left) that manipulated the products presented the lowest temperatures. Findings indicate that employers of pig slaughterhouses should provide gloves with adequate thermal insulation to preserve the health of workers’ hands.

Highlights

  • In 2015, Brazil was rated the fourth leading producer and exporter of pork meat in the world [1].Vergara and Pansera [2] analyzed the activity of boning shoulder in a pig slaughterhouse in the city of Ipiranga-SC/Brazil

  • The results revealed that 66% of workers (n = 70) felt cold in the hands at different intensities: (−1)

  • Studies indicate that the majority of workers at a poultry slaughterhouse, who perform their activities in artificially cold environments, felt cold 54.1% [9] and 78% felt cold in the hands [25]

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Summary

Introduction

Vergara and Pansera [2] analyzed the activity of boning shoulder in a pig slaughterhouse in the city of Ipiranga-SC/Brazil. The findings suggested that employees were exposed to ergonomic risk related to the physical environment and physical load, and presented high incidence of pain in the wrist, shoulder and lower back. There are several risk factors for the incidence of upper limb work-related musculoskeletal disorders (UL-WMSDs) in slaughterhouse workers: repetitive work [4,5,6,7,8], artificially cold environments [6,9,10], use of manual tools, and the application of force in the tasks [6,8,11,12,13]; and the use of gloves [6,14]. Prolonged exposure to cold often associated with insufficient clothing or physical activity may result in whole-body cooling

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