4.5 Article

Procedural and anthropometric factors associated with musculoskeletal injuries among gastroenterology endoscopists

Journal

APPLIED ERGONOMICS
Volume 104, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.apergo.2022.103805

Keywords

Endoscopy; Colonoscopy; Ergonomics; Injury; Disability; Musculoskeletal; Pain; Occupational injury

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This study describes the risk factors and consequences of musculoskeletal injuries among gastroenterologists. It found that activity-limiting injuries have a negative impact on procedural volume and efficiency.
Background and aims: Musculoskeletal (MSK) injuries among gastroenterologists are common. Our study describes risk factors and consequences of injury by comparing provider-specific anthropometric and objective procedural data to self-reported injury patterns. Methods: A validated MSK symptom survey was sent to gastroenterologists to gauge prevalence, distribution, and severity of active injury. Respondents' procedural activities over 7 years were collected via an endoscopic database. Results: 64 surveys were completed. 54 respondents had active pain; 53.1% reported activity-limiting injury. Activity-limiting injuries lead to longer colonoscopy times (25.3 vs. 22.1 min, P = 0.03) and lower procedural volumes (532 vs. 807, P = 0.01). Hand/wrist injuries yielded longer colonoscopy insertion times (9.35 vs. 8.21 min, P = 0.03) and less hands-on scope hours (81.2 vs. 111.7 h, P = 0.04). Higher esophagogastroduodenoscopy volume corelated with shoulder injury (336.5 vs. 243.1 EGDs/year, P = 0.04). Females had more foot injuries (P = 0.04). Conclusion: Activity-limiting MSK symptoms/injuries affect over 50% of endoscopists with negative impact on procedural volume and efficiency.

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