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Journal Article

Citation

Mannocci A, Gabrijelcic S, Di Thiene D, Saulle R, Boccia A, La Torre G. Med. Lav. 2012; 103(4): 268-275.

Vernacular Title

La sicurezza sul lavoro nelle aziende private del comparto trasporto merci e persone su strada: confronto tra medie e piccole imprese.

Affiliation

Dipartimento di Sanità Pubblica e Malattie Infettive, Sapienza Università di Roma.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2012, Società italiana di medicina del lavoro, Publisher Mattioli)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

22880489

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The road freight and passenger transport sector exposes the workers of this sector to a considerable health risk. Application of the relative legislation to safeguard worker's safety is an obligation for the employer. OBJECTIVES: The aim of the study was to assess the application of current legislation in the trucking sector and ascertain whether there are differences between large and small enterprises. METHODS: The study was conducted through direct interview with managers of road freight and passenger transport companies in the Lazio Region in 2009. Information was collected using a questionnaire composed of 77 items concerning risk assessment and organization aspects in the enterprises. The enterprisers were stratified by number of workers and drivers. To detect possible associations the Chi-squared and Fisher's Exact tests were used. RESULTS: A total of 42 enterprisers participated in the study. Significant differences were found between larger enterprisers (10 workers) and smaller enterprises (< 10 workers), concerning risk assessment from vibrations (p = 0.006), night work (p = 0.026), microclimatic conditions (p = 0.047). Regarding risk prevention/management aspects, the enterprisers with a higher number of workers were more likely to have a workers' representative for safety compared to the smaller enterprises (respectively 88.9% versus 50.0%) and a road accidents Register (77.8% versus 16.7%), with p < 0.001 significance levels. CONCLUSIONS: The risks most frequently assessed, in decreasing order, were: vibrations, manual handling of loads, stress, noise, awkward postures, night work, alcohol consumption, drug addiction and microclimatic conditions. Vibrations, night work and microclimatic conditions risks were assessed to a lower degree in the smaller enterprisers compared to the larger enterprises.


Language: it

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