Temporal patterns of sitting at work are associated with neck–shoulder pain in blue-collar workers: a cross-sectional analysis of accelerometer data in the DPHACTO study

Mar 4, 2016International archives of occupational and environmental health

Timing of sitting during work is linked to neck and shoulder pain in blue-collar workers

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Abstract

Time in brief bursts of occupational sitting is associated with a lower intensity of .

  • Increased time spent in moderate periods of occupational sitting is linked to a higher intensity of neck-shoulder pain.
  • No significant association was found between prolonged periods of occupational sitting and neck-shoulder pain intensity.
  • Temporal patterns of sitting during leisure time do not appear to influence neck-shoulder pain intensity.

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Key numbers

0.68
Decrease in Pain Intensity
Adjusted odds ratio for brief sitting periods
1.32
Increase in Pain Intensity
Adjusted odds ratio for moderate sitting periods
0.78
No Association
Adjusted odds ratio for prolonged sitting periods

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What this is

  • This research investigates how the timing and duration of sitting at work relate to in blue-collar workers.
  • Using accelerometers, the study measures sitting patterns and pain intensity in a sample of 659 Danish workers.
  • Findings reveal that brief and moderate sitting periods are linked to different pain intensities, while prolonged sitting shows no association.

Essence

  • Temporal patterns of occupational sitting affect intensity among blue-collar workers, with brief sitting periods associated with lower pain and moderate periods linked to higher pain.

Key takeaways

  • Occupational sitting in brief bursts (≤5 min) is associated with a decrease in intensity, with an adjusted odds ratio (OR) of 0.68.
  • Moderate periods of occupational sitting (>5–20 min) show a positive association with , reflected in an adjusted OR of 1.32.
  • No significant association exists between prolonged sitting (>20 min) and , with an adjusted OR of 0.78.

Caveats

  • The cross-sectional design limits causal inferences about the relationship between sitting patterns and pain intensity.
  • Psychosocial factors were not fully adjusted for due to missing data, potentially affecting the results.

Definitions

  • Neck-shoulder pain (NSP): Pain intensity in the neck and shoulder region, measured on a scale from 0 (no pain) to 10 (worst pain imaginable).

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