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KMID : 1141220150060040279
Safety and Health at Work
2015 Volume.6 No. 4 p.279 ~ p.288
Measurement and Modeling of Job Stress of Electric Overhead Traveling Crane Operators
Krishna Obilisetty B.

Maiti Jhareswar
Ray Pradip K.
Samanta Biswajit
Mandal Saptarshi
Sarkar Sobhan
Abstract
Background: In this study, the measurement of job stress of electric overhead traveling crane operators and quantification of the effects of operator and workplace characteristics on job stress were assessed.

Methods: Job stress was measured on five subscales: employee empowerment, role overload, role ambiguity, rule violation, and job hazard. The characteristics of the operators that were studied were age, experience, body weight, and body height. The workplace characteristics considered were hours of exposure, cabin type, cabin feature, and crane height. The proposed methodology included administration of a questionnaire survey to 76 electric overhead traveling crane operators followed by analysis using analysis of variance and a classification and regression tree.

Results: The key findings were: (1) the five subscales can be used to measure job stress; (2) employee empowerment was the most significant factor followed by the role overload; (3) workplace characteristics contributed more towards job stress than operator's characteristics; and (4) of the workplace characteristics, crane height was the major contributor.

Conclusion: The issues related to crane height and cabin feature can be fixed by providing engineering or foolproof solutions than relying on interventions related to the demographic factors.
KEYWORD
classification and regression tree, electrical overhead traveling crane operation, job stress modeling
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