- Source: This is an article from The University of Sydney - 8 July 2020 -
A major review of knee osteoarthritis (OA) - which is a leading cause of job loss and disability - reveals widespread risk of OA, demonstrating the need for a systemic approach to prevention outside of traditional workplaces.
Knee replacements are a huge burden on society and individuals and can lead to surgery, pain and loss of mobility. A major global systematic review has identified the common jobs – paid and unpaid – that may be putting people unknowingly at risk.
A study by the Universities of Sydney, Oxford and Southampton reveals there is a need for targeted work health and safety practices to extend beyond physically burdensome jobs; regulators and insurance companies should take account of the high number of medium-risk occupations and that unpaid roles also rate highly.
It is the biggest meta-analysis and systematic review of the potentially debilitating knee osteoarthritis (OA) – comprising 71 studies and almost one million people – and the first systematic review into the association between job ‘titles’ and knee OA.