Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State...

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Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University

Transcript of Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State...

Page 1: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

Attributions, Stress, and

Work-Related Low Back Pain

George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIHIllinois State University

Page 2: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

Background & Significance

LBP WC claims in the US (1992)– 16% of claims – 33% of costs (>$49 billion)

Risk factors – individual, job-related, physical, & psychosocial

In spite of mechanization, LBP is still a major source of disability

Page 3: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

Exposure

Dose Response

Capacity

Physical Stain Model

Page 4: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

Conceptual Model for Attributions as a Risk Factor for LBP

Attributions

Resources

Psychological demand

Psychological Stress

Knowledge ofBack Safety

Low Back PainFunction

Injury

Work

EnvIronment

Physical demand

Page 5: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

The Dimensions of Resources

Resources

Individual characteristics

Social environment

Safety climate

Age GenderFitness Body mass index Education Coping skillsSmoking Prior LBP

Job social supportHome social support

Management supportImplementation

Page 6: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

What is an attribution?

Attribution: a natural human tendency to see patterns or explain unfortunate events

Attributions have 3 major dimensions:– locus of causation– stability/permanence– controllability

Page 7: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

How are attributions & stress related?

External, permanent, uncontrollable factors are expected to cause stress

Attributions of LBP cause may affect:– the worker’s knowledge of back safety– perceived job control– likelihood of reporting LBP

Page 8: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

How is stress related to LBP?

Prolonged muscle tension may– overload muscle fibers– result in loss of blood flow to muscles

Overload documented in neck & shoulders– Also likely in low back

There may be other mechanisms as well

Page 9: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

Hypotheses

H1: Persons knowledgeable in back safety will attribute internal causes of LBP (behavior)

H2: Less LBP in those high in back safety knowledge.

H3: Perceived job control will be higher in those who attribute internal causes of LBP

Page 10: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

Hypotheses

H4: Workers with LBP will also report high demands, low control & low social support.

H5:Workers with LBP are more likely to attribute the cause to an external source.

Page 11: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

Specific Aims

1. Measure the prevalence of LBP in garment workers.

2. To observe & record postures & movements of workers performing primary job tasks.

3. Measure worker stress using the Karasek Demand-Control-Support model.

Page 12: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

Specific Aims (cont)

4. Measure workers’ attributions of LBP causation.

5. Use attribution theory in a new model to explore the associations between worker stress & LBP.

Page 13: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

Research Design & Methods

Study design: cross-sectional Study population: a garment factory with

approximately 400, mostly white, unionized, middle-aged women, & paid by piece work

Data collection: self-administered questionnaire & direct observation

Page 14: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

Research Design & Methods (cont)

Developed questionnaire & observation checklist

Developed new scales to measure attributions & knowledge of back safety

Page 15: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

Data analysis

Analysis of newly developed scales Univariate analyses Bivariate analyses Multivariate analyses

Page 16: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

Results: Reliability & Validity

Karasek’s Demand-Control-Support Model Newly developed scales Observation results Comparison of attributions of

managers/supervisors & workers

Page 17: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

Comparison of Workers & Managers Workers (79%) & managers (100%) attribute

LBP to worker actions– 86% of workers & 31% of managers also blamed

work conditions When asked which was most important

– 56% of workers said work conditions compared to only 6% of managers

Page 18: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

Results: LBP Prevalence

Any report of LBP last year: 63.7% LBP not due to sports or non-occ. causes

that limited movement or interfered with work at home or on the job: 36.2%

Page 19: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

Knowledge of Back Safety

Knowledgeable workers had high internal attribution (OR = 4.6) p < 0.001

Knowledgeable workers do not report less LBP

Page 20: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

Perceived Job Control

Higher control in workers with internal attribution & job social support from the supervisor

Also age & income effects

Page 21: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

Demand-Control-Support Model

LBP was only associated with high job demand (OR = 2.5, p < 0.01)

LBP was also associated with higher income (OR = 2.4, p < 0.01)

Page 22: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

Attributions & LBP

More LBP in workers attributing LBP to job tasks (OR = 4.4, p < 0.001)

Less LBP in workers with high supervisor social support (OR = 0.25, p < 0.01)

Also age & income effects

Page 23: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

Limitations

Cross-sectional design– temporality, survivor bias

Recall bias Inter-rater agreement Unique study population Unmeasured variables

Page 24: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

Discussion - Implications 1

Measure attributions before teaching back safety

Improve worker control – attributional retraining– increasing social support

Page 25: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

Discussion - Implications 2

Demand-Control-Support model may need modification for use with LBP

Attribution model works well for study of LBP

Page 26: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

Discussion - Future Research

Examine manager/supervisors & worker attributions for presence of mismatch

Use model in other occ. groups & other outcomes

Measure attributions at baseline & do a longitudinal study

Page 27: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

Implications of attribution on stress, biomechanics, & LBP If root cause of LBP is worker actions, need

improvements in risk communication If LBP is caused or contributed by work

conditions, need env. modification

Page 28: Attributions, Stress, and Work-Related Low Back Pain George Byrns, MPH, Ph.D., CIH Illinois State University.

Epilogue:Expectancies: Cause & Responsibility

Worker is careless-> make worker careful Job is dangerous -> make worker careful Job is dangerous -> make the job safer Worker is careless -> make the job safer