EmaxHealth Health News
Home » Aging » Back Pain Relief

Researchers Aim To Give Nurses A Lift

Ads by Google

All About:
  • Back Pain Relief

By Armen Hareyan on July 28, 2006 - 8:09am for eMaxHealth

Lower Back Pain In Nurses

Nurses offer care and comfort, but they often end up with a pain in the back for their efforts, the results of a new study show.

"Nurses suffer from work-related low back pain more often than workers in other professions," said Edgar Vieira, a doctoral student in the University of Alberta Faculty of Rehabilitation Medicine and lead author of the study.

Most often, nurses hurt their backs while turning bed-ridden patients or transferring them among stretchers, beds and chairs, Vieira said, adding that orthopedic and intensive care unit (ICU) nurses have the highest rates of low back pain among all nurses. According to the study, 65 per cent of orthopedic nurses and 58 per cent of ICU nurses develop debilitating low back pain at some point in their careers.

"If a patient is unconscious, nurses will try to turn him every two hours or so to prevent him from getting bed sores. If you consider that nurses often work 12 hours shifts, the amount of lifting in one shift adds up a lot, and you can see how the job could be very hard to manage physically," said Vieira.

However, Vieira believes a few simple changes may prevent nurses from sustaining injuries. For example, providing nursing with access to more mechanical lifting devices would help reduce the risks, he said, adding that mechanical lifting devices are currently used only about 15 per cent of the time.

"Also, hospital rooms are often small, and nurses have to move furniture around so that they can do their jobs - most of the time lifting devices wouldn't even fit in these rooms," added Vieira, whose study appeared this month in the Journal of Advanced Nursing.

Providing bigger, uncluttered rooms to work in would help nurses, as would hiring more staff to share the workload, Vieira said.

Preventing work related low back pain is a humanitarian issue, and efforts to address the controllable risk factors are essential, Vieira said. He also noted that such injuries incur a great expense to taxpayers.

"Most individuals that suffer low back pain carry on with their normal activities after a few days, but in about seven per cent of cases, the pain persists and worsens, limiting daily activity and work. About 70 per cent of worker compensation costs are generated by the cases in which the absence from work lasts six months or longer. So, the best thing for everyone is to prevent disabilities, and the best way to do this is to prevent causation of the injuries.

"We hope we can raise awareness of this problem by improving working conditions and educating nurses about how to reduce the number of work-related low back pain injuries that they suffer, because right now the incidences of it are way too high," Vieira said.

Source: 
University of Alberta

eMaxHealth welcomes yourcomments and feedback on this story without registration, but keep the comments meaningful please. Links are not accepted.

  • Add new comment

Similar Stories

  • New Mobile Technology Brings New Health Concern: "Text Neck"
  • Yoga, Stretching May Relieve Chronic Low Back Pain
  • Chronic Pain Makes Brain Thinner, Effects Reversible
  • Balloon Kyphoplasty Not Much Better Than Conservative Therapy
  • Spinal manipulation good for back pain finds review

 Dr. Oz Promotes Magnet Cure
 Skin Care Secrets in Your Kitchen
 3 Gadgets to Make You Look 10 Years Younger
 Catalase is the Culprit for Gray Hair
 Vibration Therapy Helps Chronic Pain
 What If Antidepressants Don't Work
 When Obesity is OK for Some

Health Categories

 EMAXHEALTH HOME
 AFFORDABLE HEALTH INSURANCE
 DIET & WEIGHT LOSS
 FITNESS & EXERCISE
 MEN'S HEALTH
 WOMEN'S HEALTH
 BEAUTY
 ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE
 CANCER TREATMENT
 AGING
 DISEASE and CONDITION
 MENTAL HEALTH
 GENERAL HEALTH
 PERSONAL HEALTH
 GOURMET FOOD & HEALTH
 HEALING & SPIRITUALITY
 MONEY AND HEALTH
 Comment Moderation
  • Health RSS Feeds
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • About Us
  • Editorial Review Process
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Contributors
Copyright eMaxhealth.com 2005-2012. All rights reserved.

This website is certified by Health On the Net Foundation. Click to verify. This site complies with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health information:
verify here.