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  4. Engaging workers in WRMSD prevention: Two interdisciplinary case studies in an activity clinic. Wor

Engaging workers in WRMSD prevention: Two interdisciplinary case studies in an activity clinic. Wor

Author(s)
Quillerou-Grivot, Edwidge
Kloetzer, Laure  
Chaire de psychologie socioculturelle II  
Simonet, Pascal
Date issued
January 1, 2015
In
A Journal of Prevention, Assessment & Rehabilitation
Vol
2
No
51
From page
161
To page
173
Reviewed by peer
1
Subjects
Power to act cross self-confrontations intervention dialogue developmental methodology
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This paper reports on two case studies conducted by the Activity Clinic team to support the prevention of Work-Related Musculoskeletal Disorders (WRMSDs) in the workplace. Research so far qualifies WRMSDs as multifactorial and organizational pathologies. It has also demonstrated that in situ clinical analysis of the work activity improves the understanding of WRMSDs and their long-term prevention. OBJECTIVE: In the two cases reported here (one in the car industry and the other among gravediggers in a large French city), the interventionist framework combined ergonomic observations, biomechanical monitoring, and a developmental methodology called Cross Self-Confrontation (CSC). The goal was to help workers and managers reflect on their work constraints, the impact of those constraints on health, and the possibility of transforming the work. METHOD: Volunteers among the workers were prompted to engage in collective re-thinking of their work based on video-recordings and monitoring of their physical activity. In the CSC dialogues, biomechanical or ergonomic quantitative representations of the work activity were transformed by the researchers and the workers into argumentation and analysis tools for understanding and prevention of WRMSDs. CSC interviews were recorded and analyzed to track the dynamics of collective elaboration - both conceptual and practical - on WRMSDs prevention. RESULTS: CSC discussions helped workers and managers transform their views on health, activity, and work constraints, and experiment with alternatives for health protection. The dialogical framework and quantitative representations were instrumental in the process of collective re-conceptualization of conflicts in the work activity and of resources for its transformation. CONCLUSION: This research demonstrates how the integration of biomechanical and ergonomic mediations in the CSC framework promotes WRMSDs prevention in the workplace. This integration supports discussions within work teams and across organizational levels on work dimensions, which may lead to alternatives supporting health.
Publication type
journal article
Identifiers
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/20.500.14713/64104
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Engaging_Workers_in_WRMSD_Prevention_Two.pdf

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