Toggle navigation
Join
Login
Home
DVDs
Streaming Service
Journals
Online videos
Databases
Posters
Safety tools
Standards
All Words
Any Words
Exact Match
Books
DVDs
Online
Standards
Advanced search
Back to Search Results
Are resident handlings in eldercare wards associated with musculoskeletal pain and sickness absence among the workers? A prospective study based on onsite observations
Call no.:
JNL SCA
Author:
Januario, LB
;
Mathiassen, Svend Erik
Find this in:
Scandinavian journal of work, environment & health: 2021, 47, n.8 - November
Length:
609 - 618 pp.
Year:
2021
Type:
Journal Article
Subject:
Aged care services
;
Musculoskeletal disorders
;
Research
Related Items
Related Catalogue Items
Other items related to this item are:
Source
Result
Link
Title
Scandinavian journal of work, environment & health
(Journals)
Similar Items
Work-related risk factors for incidence and recurrence of neck and shoulder complaints among nursing home and elderly care workers.
Work-related risk factors for the incidence and recurrence of shoulder and neck complaints among nursing-home and elderly-care workers.
Are work organisation interventions effective in preventing or reducing work-related musculoskeletal disorders : a systematic review of the literature.
Identifying return to work trajectories using sequence analysis in a cohort of workers with work related musculoskeletal disorders.
The effect of training for a participatory ergonomic intervention on physical exertion and musculoskeletal pain among childcare workers (the TOY project) - a wait-list cluster-randomized controlled trial
Employee musculoskeletal complaints and supervisor support : implications for behavioral stress reactions.
Psychosocial factors and low back pain outcomes in a pooled analysis of low back pain studies.
Self-reported variables as determinants of upper limb musculoskeletal symptoms in assembly line workers.
Worksafe funded research : dissemination, application, implementation and evaluation.
Epidemiological methods : the effect of envelope type on response rates in epidemiological study of back pain.