Nurse Education Today
Volume 30, Issue 5 , Pages 383-385 , July 2010

Musculo-skeletal injury – Are Universities doing enough to protect students?

References 

  1. Bird D. Patient safety: improving incident reporting. Nursing Standard. 2005;20(14–16):43–46
  2. Cornish J, Jones A. Evaluation of moving and handling training for pre-registration nurses and its application to practice. Nurse Education in Practice. 2007;7:128–134
  3. deCastro AB. Barriers to reporting a workplace injury: recognizing the difficulties and encouraging a determined approach. American Journal of Nursing. 2003;103(8):112
  4. Evans SM, Berry JG, Smith BJ, Esterman A, Selim P, O’Shaughnessy J, et al. Attitudes and barriers to incident reporting: a collaborative hospital study. Quality and Safety in Health Care. 2006;15(1):39–43
  5. Green C. Study of moving and handling on two medical wards. British Journal of Nursing. 1996;5(5):pp. 303–304, 306–308, 310–311
  6. Griffith R, Stevens M. Manual handling and the lawfulness of no-lift policies. Nursing Standard. 2004;18(21):39–43
  7. Health and Safety Commission, 1993. Third Report; Organising for Safety. ACSNI Study Group on Human Factors, HMSO, London.
  8. Health and Safety Executive . Manual Handling: Manual Handling Operations Regulations, Guidance on the Regulations. Sudbury: HSE; 1992;
  9. Health and Safety Executive, 1998. Manual Handling in the Health Service, HSE Books.
  10. Health and Safety Executive, 2007. Self Reported Work Related Illness and Workplace Injuries 2005/06: Results from the Labour Force Survey, Norwich. OPSI <www.hse.gov.uk/statistics/causdis/back.htm> (accessed 25.09.07).
  11. Health and Safety Executive Manual Handling, 2004. Manual Handling Operations Regulations 1992 (As Amended). Guidance on the Regulations, third ed. HSE Books.
  12. Hignett S. Work-related back pain in nurses. Journal of Advanced Nursing. 1996;23:1238–1246
  13. Jootun D, MacInnes A. Examining how well students use correct handling procedures. Nursing Times. 2005;101(4):38–40
  14. Kane M, Parahoo K. Lifting: why nurses follow bad practice. Nursing Standard. 1994;8(25):34–38
  15. Kier P, Macdonell C. Muscle activity during patient transfers: a preliminary study on the influence of lift assist and experience. Ergonomics. 2004;47(3):296–306
  16. Kneafsey R, Haigh C. Learning safe patient handling skills: student nurse experiences of university and practice based education. Nurse Education Today. 2007;27(8):832–839
  17. Mandelstam M. Casefile. The Column. 2003;(February 9–10):
  18. Nelson A, Fragala G, Menzel N. Myths and facts about back injuries in nursing: the incidence rate of back injuries among nurses is more than double that among construction workers, perhaps because misperceptions persist about cause and solutions. American Journal of Nursing. 2003;103(2):32–40
  19. NMC . Standards of Proficiency for Pre-registration Nursing Education. Nursing and Midwifery Council; 2005;
  20. NMC . Standards of Proficiency for Pre-registration Nursing Education. London: Nursing and Midwifery Council; 2006;
  21. Royal College of Nursing . Introducing a Safer a Handling Policy. London: RCN; 2000;
  22. Smallwood J. Patient handling, students nurses’ views. Learning in Health and Social Care. 2006;5(4):208–219
  23. Smedley J, Inskip H, Trevelyan F, Buckle P, Cooper C, Coggon D. Risk factors for incident neck and shoulder pain in hospital nurses. Occupational and Environmental Medicine. 2003;66(11):864
  24. Smith, J. (Ed.), 2005. The Guide to the Handling of People, BackCare, in Collaboration with the RCN and National Back Exchange, fifth ed. Middlesex.
  25. Swain J, Pufahl E, Williamson G. Do they practise what we teach? A survey of manual handling practice amongst student nurses. Journal of Clinical Nursing. 2003;12:297–306
  26. Waring J. Beyond blame: cultural barriers to medical incident reporting. Social Science and Medicine. 2005;60(9):1927–1935

PII: S0260-6917(09)00200-7

doi: 10.1016/j.nedt.2009.10.010

Nurse Education Today
Volume 30, Issue 5 , Pages 383-385 , July 2010