ACCSH 1995-2, exh 15, Musculoskeletal Disorders in Construction
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OSHA Advisory Committee for Construction Safety and Health
eLCOSH Editor's note:
The OSHA Advisory Committee for Construction Safety and Health (ACCSH) was authorized in the 1969
Construction Safety Act (US Code Title 40§3704, to advise OSHA on matters related to construction
safety and health. It consists of five public representatives (one is normally from a State OSHA
program, one from NIOSH, etc.), five labor representatives (normally from various Building Trades
Unions) and five management representatives (primarily from contractor trade associations). The
ACCSH often sets up work groups, which are open to the public, to draft positions on various topics
or issues. These positions are then often voted on by the full ACCSH and those recommendations referred
to OSHA for their consideration. These work products represent a lot of effort and thought by many
individuals. They are posted here to make that work more easily accessible. This historical archive
many serve as a resource to future regulators and safety advocates, so they don’t have to
start from scratch. OSHA has removed some of these documents from their website which makes access
difficult.
To the best of our knowledge this is a complete archive of ACCSH working group reports and recommendations.
If you are aware of others, please contact us. For the most recent or future meetings, you can find
information at http://www.osha.gov/doc/accsh . |
May 26, 1995
- Iowa Symptom Survey
- 7,000 surveys sent to union construction workers
- 2,078
surveys completed and returned
- 72 percent complained of job-related back problems
- 42-49 percent complained of problems with knees, wrists/hands, shoulders, or neck
- 12 percent missed work because of back problems
- 2-4 percent missed work due to other musculoskeletal disorders
- Musculoskeletal symptoms among electricians
- 308 apprentices and journeymen surveyed
- 50 percent experienced back, hand, and wrist problems
- 35 percent either missed work or went on light duty
- Overexertion and bodily reaction events among Oregon workers
- Study ran from 1987-1991
- In construction, over 34% of the claims were for overexertion: backs, shoulders, etc.
- A review by Scott Schneider and Pam Susi on potential hazards in new construction related to ergonomics
- ANSI Z-365 Draft Standard on Control of Work-Related Cumulative Trauma Disorders
- Study of muscular stress in construction machine operators
- 37.6 percent of all lost workday injuries in construction are due to sprains and/or strains.
- 25.3 percent of lost workday injuries in construction affect the back.
- 1.5 percent of lost workday injuries in construction are due to repetitive motion.
- Construction has the second highest incidence rate for sprain and strain lost workday injuries (after transportation):
184.4 cases per 10,000 full-time employees.
- Construction has the second highest incident rate for overexertion lost workday injuries (after transportation):
111.2 cases per 10,000 full-time employees
- Lost workdays per case in construction average 7 days, third highest after mining (16 days) and transportation
(8 days)
This is not a construction ergonomics standard.
This is a draft standard for musculoskeletal disorders in the construction industry.
- Changed title to "Protective Standard for Musculoskeletal Disorders in the Construction
Industry"
- Revised purpose section to address the occurrence of work-related musculoskeletal disorders (WMD) in construction
and added "to promote public and private involvement" in advancing the purpose of the standard
- Revised the signal risk factors and made exposure to them all 2 hours in a single workshift
- Changed the scope section "unassisted frequent or forceful manual handling" to "unassisted
or frequent manual handling"
- Deleted trigger of one/two or more workers with WMD
- Revised multi-employer worksite section to require contractors and others to "coordinate" their efforts, not
share responsibility for compliance
- Eliminated grandparent exceptions for employers with previous programs
- Changed startup date section to 18 months for all employers to do task analysis
- Deleted references to farm, and agricultural work
- Deleted quick fix section of standard. Standardizes 3 years to address al tasks
- Requires controls to "the extent feasible" rather than to the "lowest feasible
level"
- Changed timetable for implementing controls to "in a timely manner" rather than "immediately"
- No longer limits personal protection equipment to preclude devices worn on the wrist, back, etc.
- Replaced requirement to "ensure that employees can determine weight of materials" with requirement for "manufacturers
to label weight where feasible and supply lifting handles"
- Deleted section "G, Ergonomic Design and Controls for New or Changed Jobs"
- Moved employee information requirements to training section.
- Allows employee representatives access to copies of this standard
- Deleted references to "ergonomic teams" in training section
- Changed startup date for training to "immediately" for information, "6
months" for people doing job analyses;
and, "2 years" for those doing task analyses
- Required that employers "make available" rather than "provide" various information to health care provider
- Changed musculoskeletal disorder management plan to musculoskeletal disorder recovery plan
- Changed requirement for employer to ensure plan is followed at all times to only "after
employee returns to work"
- Deleted record keeping requirements that transfers all records to NIOSH and former employees if employer
goes out of business
- Changed retention requirements for checklists, task improvement, and training from " 5
to 3 years"
- Changed all references from "workplace" to "worksite"
- Changed references from "designated representative" to "authorized
representative"
- Redrafted Appendices A,B,C, and D to reflect construction standard
- That the full ACCSH forward the Draft Construction Musculoskeletal Disorders Standard on to Assistant Secretary
Joseph A. Dear for review and comment
- That the full ACCSH does not vote, at this time, to accept or reject the workgroup's report until comments are
received from the Assistant Secretary and potential revisions are made by the work group
- That the workgroup continue in its efforts to complete Appendixes A, B, C, D, Risk Factors, and the check list
to conform to the Draft Construction Standard
- That once the workgroup has completed its full task, completing all of the sections that will make up the Construction
Musculoskeletal Disorders Standard, the full ACCSH hold one or two public hearings to receive feedback from interested
parties on what the workgroup has produced
- That the workgroup revise its report (the one you currently have in front of you) and forward it to the full
ACCSH Committee for consideration
- That once all of the above is completed, the full ACCSH then vote on accepting or rejecting the workgroup's report
OSHA Advisory Committee for Construction Safety and Health (ACCSH)
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