Having a body mass index (BMI) in the overweight or
obese range increases the risk of traumatic
workplace injury, according to researchers at the
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health’s
Center for Injury Research and Policy.
Employer-sponsored weight loss and maintenance
programs should be considered as part of a
well-rounded workplace safety plan. The study was
Advance Access published on May 7, 2007, by the
American Journal of Epidemiology.
BMI is a measure of body fat based on an adult’s
height and weight. It is used to screen for weight
categories that may lead to health problems.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, a BMI below 18.5 is considered
underweight, 18.5–24.9 is normal; 25–29.9 is
overweight and over 30 is obese.
“Clearly, limited resources for workplace injury
prevention and control should target the most
prominent and modifiable risk factors, but we cannot
neglect the fact that our study and other recently
published studies support an association between BMI
and the risk, distribution and prevalence of
workplace injury,” said
Keshia M. Pollack, PhD, MPH lead
author of the study and an assistant professor in
the Bloomberg School of Public Health’s
Department of Health Policy and Management.
The researchers used medical and injury surveillance
data on hourly workers employed in eight plants of
the same aluminum manufacturer to determine whether
increased BMI was a risk factor for workplace
injury. The plants were scattered across the United
States. BMI was calculated using National Institutes
of Health criteria. Employees were grouped into five
categories: underweight, normal, overweight, obesity
levels I and II and obesity level III.
Of the 7,690 workers included in the study, 29
percent were injured at least once between January
2, 2002, and December 31, 2004. Approximately 85
percent of the injured workers were classified as
overweight or obese. More than 28 percent of
injuries occurred among employees classified as
overweight, 30 percent in the obese I and II
category and almost 34 percent in the obese III
category.
The severely obese group who had a BMI of greater
than 40 also had the most injuries to the
hand/wrist/finger (22 percent) when compared to the
same injuries in the other weight categories. Almost
10 percent of all injuries in the obese III group
were to the leg/knee, compared to 7 percent of
workers classified as overweight, which was the next
highest injury rate.
“We know that obesity prevention policies and
programs in the workplace are important simply
because of likely improvements in employee health,”
said Pollack, the Leon S. Robertson Faculty
Development Chair in Injury Prevention. “What we do
not know is if obesity prevention in the workplace
will also have the added benefit of improving injury
rates and reducing lost work time. Evaluations of
worksite health promotion and obesity prevention
efforts should measure changes not only in employee
health, but also traumatic injury.”
The researchers say that more work will be needed to
test the effectiveness for reducing weight among
hourly (non-office) employees who face a number of
barriers to participating in worksite physical
activity programs, such as the need to remove
protective clothing for midday exercise and a lack
of time because of additional employment or home
responsibilities.
Keshia M.
Pollack and
Gary S. Sorock, both with the Johns
Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, and
Martin D. Slade, Linda Cantley, Kanta Sircar,
Oyebode Taiwo and Mark R. Cullen co-authored the
study.
“Association between Body Mass Index and Acute
Traumatic Workplace Injury in Hourly Manufacturing
Employees” was supported by grants from the National
Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney
Diseases, the National Institute of Occupational
Safety and Health, the NIOSH Education and Research
Center for Occupational Safety and Health at the
JHSPH, the Donaghue Foundation and the Network on
Socioeconomic Status and Health of the John D. and
Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. Support was also
provided by Alcoa Inc.
The Bloomberg School of Public Health’s Center for
Injury Research and Policy is celebrating its 20th
anniversary this year.