Authors
David Coggon, Georgia Ntani, Sergio Vargas-Prada, José Miguel Martinez, Consol Serra, Fernando G Benavides, Keith T Palmer, CUPID collaboration
Publication date
2013/8/1
Journal
Occupational and environmental medicine
Volume
70
Issue
8
Pages
575-584
Publisher
BMJ Publishing Group Ltd
Description
Objectives
To quantify the variation in rates of absence due to musculoskeletal pain across 47 occupational groups (mostly nurses and office workers) from 18 countries, and to explore personal and group-level risk factors that might explain observed differences.
Methods
A standardised questionnaire was used to obtain information about musculoskeletal pain, sickness absence and possible risk factors in a cross-sectional survey of 12 416 workers (92–1017 per occupational group). Additionally, group-level data on socioeconomic variables, such as sick pay and unemployment rates, were assembled by members of the study team in each country. Associations of sickness absence with risk factors were examined by Poisson regression.
Results
Overall, there were more than 30-fold differences between occupational groups in the 12-month prevalence of prolonged musculoskeletal sickness absence, and even …
Total citations
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