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Patient handling through lifting and moving of patients or residents, especially in a long-term care setting, is a key risk factor leading to injuries in healthcare workers.1–3 These injuries cause enormous pain and suffering to the healthcare workers and their families, as well as impose an enormous economic burden on society through productivity losses, and increase in healthcare costs and workers compensation costs. Many of these patient handling injuries can be prevented through appropriate use of engineering control interventions, for example, through the introduction of overhead lift equipment, in long-term care facilities.4
The paper by Tompa et al5 uses an analytic approach to evaluate a peer coaching programme for an overhead lift use intervention in the long-term care sector in British Columbia, Canada, by assessing its impact on reduction of injuries for healthcare workers (related to patient handling). It also performs a cost–benefit analysis (CBA) by estimating the concomitant increase in overall costs for the implementation of the peer coaching programme and the monetary value of the averted costs generated. This analysis is a very meaningful contribution to the field of occupational health literature because it addresses several critical issues that can help in reducing the barriers to occupational safety and health (OSH) interventions, and in enhancing the health and safety …
Footnotes
Competing interests None declared.
Provenance and peer review Commissioned; internally peer reviewed.