Back pain in the working population: prevalence rates in Dutch trades and professions
- 1 June 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Ergonomics
- Vol. 38 (6) , 1283-1298
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00140139508925188
Abstract
An analysis of three health surveys in the Dutch working population is described, aimed at the identification of Dutch trades and professions with relative high and low prevalence rates of back pain. The sample was representative of the working population in the Netherlands and consisted of 5840 men and 2908 women. The analysis included 33 trades and 34 professions, with at least 50 respondents for each. A total of 26·6% of the workers reported back pain quite often. Almost 2% reported absence from work in the last two months, and 4% considered their back pain to be a chronic disabling disease. There was a substantial variation in prevalence rate of low-back pain between trades and professions ranging from 12% to 4%. Trades with relatively high prevalence rates were found to be the building materials industry, the construction industry and road transportation, and the wholesale industry. Trades with relatively low prevalence rates were found to be banking, public administration and commercial services. Workers in the construction industry and supervisory production workers, plumbers, drivers and cleaners have a relatively high prevalence rate of back pain. Chemists, scientists, bookkeepers, secretaries and administrative professions have a relatively low prevalence rate of back pain. It is concluded that high prevalence rates of back pain are found in particular in non-sedentary professions. Priorities in prevention of back pain should be directed towards the group with relatively high prevalence rates identified above.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Comprehensive assessment of chronic low back pain patients and controls: Physical abilities, level of activity, Psychological Adjustment and Pain PerceptionPain, 1985
- Risk of back trouble in individual occupations in DenmarkErgonomics, 1985
- Epidemiology and statistics in LuxembourgErgonomics, 1985
- Statistics on diseases in the Federal Republic of Germany with particular reference to diseases of the skeletal systemErgonomics, 1985
- Risk factors in low-back pain. An epidemiological survey.Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, 1983
- Growth hormone and periarticular new bone formation--a causal relationship? A preliminary communicationJournal of Rehabilitation Medicine, 1983
- A social epidemiology of back pain in a general populationJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1973
- The Prevalence of Rheumatoid Arthritis in Occupational GroupsActa Rheumatologica Scandinavica, 1970