Physical workload and cardiopulmonary parameters in relation to individual capacity of bulk waste workers - a cross-sectional field-study

Abstract

Purpose Waste collection is considered particularly heavy work, although no previous study has yet investigated the strain of bulk waste collection. The aim of this study is to determine the workload of bulk waste workers in practice.
Method We conducted a cross-sectional feld-study. Fourteen male volunteers from the bulk waste collection of the municipal sanitation department in Hamburg, Germany, were included. Performance was determined by cardiopulmonary exercise testing under laboratory conditions. During the shift, each worker was accompanied by a researcher, and heart rate (HR) was recorded under feld conditions using an HR watch with a belt system. We examined mean HR, relative heart rate (RHR), relative aerobic strain (RAS), calculated oxygen uptake ( .VO2) and individual ventilatory threshold 1 (VT1) as parameters of workload during their daily work.
Results During the shift, HR was scaled: 102 bpm (SD 10.2), RHR: 36.9%, .VO2: 1267 ml/min (SD 161), RAS: 49.4% (SD 9.3), and .VO2 in relation to VT1: 75% (SD 18.5). There was no signifcant diference between oxygen consumption during the main task of lifting and carrying bulky waste and the individual .VO2 at VT1.
Conclusion Although the burden of the main task of lifting and carrying bulky waste is very high (at VT1 for more than 3 h), interruptions from other tasks or formal breaks spread the burden over the entire shift. The total workload
exceeded most recommendations in the literature across the diferent work periods. However, the total burden remains below VT1, the only parameter that takes individual endurance performance into account. We recommend again VT1 as an individual upper limit for prolonged occupational work.
Keywords Heavy physical work, Manual work, Relative aerobic strain, Heart rate reserve, VT1, Anaerobic threshold,
Physical capacity, Bulk waste collection, Waste management

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Aufsatznummer29
ISSN1745-6673
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 15.12.2023