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Dive into the research topics where Julia Faucett is active.

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Featured researches published by Julia Faucett.


Journal of Pain and Symptom Management | 1994

Differences in postoperative pain severity among four ethnic groups

Julia Faucett; Newton C. Gordon; Jon D. Levine

Subjects (N = 543) reporting on acute postoperative dental pain were classified into four major ancestral groups: Asian (N = 96), black American (N = 65), European (N = 296), and Latino (N = 88). Pain severity was measured using a 10-cm visual analogue scale following a standardized operative procedure. The subjects of European descent reported significantly less severe pain than those of black American or Latino descent. They also reported less pain than Asians, although this finding did not reach significance. Evaluation of covariates, including gender, age, education, generation in the United States, and difficulty of the surgical extraction, demonstrated that gender was significant, with men reporting less pain than women regardless of ancestry. Possible implications of these findings are discussed in terms of potential differences in physiology, in addition to social learning.


American Journal of Industrial Medicine | 1997

Injury severity associated with nonfatal construction falls

Marion Gillen; Julia Faucett; James J. Beaumont; Elizabeth McLoughlin

This study evaluated injury severity in a group of construction workers who sustained nonfatal falls at work. The sample consisted of 255 adults who were identified from Doctors First Reports (DFRs) submitted to the California Department of Industrial Relations. For those that fell from heights (n = 195), the mean height of fall was 9.2 feet (SD = 7.1). The mean number of lost work days was 44.3 days (SD = 58.6) and the median was 10 days. Two measures of injury severity were used--the Injury Severity Score and the disability section of the Health Assessment Questionnaire (HAQ). Seventeen participants (7%; 95% CI, 4-10%) were deemed permanently disabled. A simultaneous multiple regression model, using five independent variables, explained approximately 21% of the variance in HAQ scores. Nonunion status and safety climate scores indicating increased risk were positively correlated with higher functional limitation as measured by HAQ scores, as were greater heights and impact on concrete surface. Higher scores on both injury severity measures were significantly and moderately associated with a greater number of days lost from work. These findings suggest that injury severity and permanent disability associated with falls in construction are notable, and identify key target areas for intervention and prevention.


Applied Ergonomics | 2002

A test of two training interventions to prevent work-related musculoskeletal disorders of the upper extremity

Julia Faucett; Mary Garry; Don Nadler; Dennis Ettare

We investigated, on behalf of a large electronics manufacturer, two types of worker training interventions for their efficacy in preventing unnecessary muscle tension and the symptoms of work-related musculoskeletal disorders. The first intervention, Muscle Learning Therapy (MLT), used electromyographic (sEMG) feedback and operant conditioning to decrease muscle tension during complex work tasks. The second intervention used adult learning and cognitive behavioral techniques in small group discussion to advance the workers capabilities for symptom and stress management and problem-solving. Workers were randomly assigned to a control group or one of the two treatment conditions. Prior to training, baseline data were collected using symptom diaries and sEMG recordings of the trapezius and forearm muscles of the left and right arms. The training interventions were conducted for 6 weeks with reinforcement training provided at 18 and 32 weeks post-baseline. Follow-up data were collected after the initial 6-week training period and at 32 weeks, prior to the reinforcement training. Symptom outcomes demonstrated significant differences at 6 weeks, increasing in severity for the control group and declining modestly for the educational group, with little change for the MLT group. These differences were not maintained at further follow-up. The MLT group was consistently effective in reducing muscle tension in the trapezius areas after 6 and 32 weeks, and was partially effective for the forearms. Further testing is recommended of these training interventions, especially with the inclusion of strategic, periodic reinforcement of the workers learning.


American Industrial Hygiene Association Journal | 1997

Ergonomics in Agriculture: Workplace Priority Setting in the Nursery Industry

James M. Meyers; John A. Miles; Julia Faucett; Ira Janowitz; Diana G. Tejeda; John N. Kabashima

Although agriculture is generally recognized as the nations most hazardous industry and displays high rates of musculoskeletal disorders with evidence to suggest that ergonomic risk factors are involved, there is very little history of application of ergonomic approaches in agricultural workplaces. A three-year National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health-supported study has been initiated in California nurseries to describe and design engineering interventions for priority musculoskeletal disorders. In this article are reported the results of the projects initial workplace job task screening for ergonomic risk factors and associated musculoskeletal disorder reports to define landmark ergonomic risk factors for the nursery industry and select priority job tasks for intervention.


Pain | 1991

The contributions of interpersonal conflict to chronic pain in the presence or absence of organic pathology.

Julia Faucett; Jon D. Levine

&NA; This study investigated the influences of social support and interpersonal conflict on chronic pain in patients with arthritis or with myofascial disorders. Measures of social support, conflict, and pain were drawn from subscales of the McGill Pain Questionnaire, the Multidimensional Pain Inventory, the Family Environment Scale, and the Interpersonal Relationships Inventory. Patients with myofascial disorders reported significantly worse pain (sensory and affective), higher depression scores, more interpersonal conflict, and less support from others than patients with arthritis, but did not differ from them on personality traits. Also, the contributions of conflict to pain were found to depend on the nature of the chronic disorder and on the source of the conflict, i.e., significant other, family, or social network members. For patients with arthritis, less intense pain (sensory and affective) was associated with higher family conflict. Less intense sensory pain in arthritis was also associated with more punishing responses from the significant other to pain. For patients with myofascial disorders, more intense affective pain was associated with higher social network conflict. Social support did not significantly contribute to pain for either group. Thus, chronic painful disorders may differ on the influences that social relationships have on pain. The implications of these differences for treatment are discussed.


Journal of Pain and Symptom Management | 1994

Depression in painful chronic disorders: The role of pain and conflict about pain

Julia Faucett

Chronic pain severity, the responses of the significant other to the patients pain, and social network relationships were investigated for their contributions to depression among patients with myofascial pain disorders (N = 67) and arthritis (N = 83). Interview data were gathered using the Beck Depression Inventory, McGill Pain Inventory, Multidimensional Pain Inventory, and Interpersonal Relationships Inventory. Patients with myofascial pain disorders reported significantly more severe depression and pain, more conflict about their pain, and more network conflict than those with arthritis. They also reported less network social support. After controlling for the type of painful chronic disorder, multiple linear regression analyses indicated that more severe depression was significantly associated with more severe pain, conflict about pain, and less network social support. Conflict about pain may increase the risk of depression for patients with chronic painful disorders. Patients with myofascial pain disorders, however, may experience more conflict about their pain because of the absence of objective physical findings that corroborate the report of pain.


American Journal of Industrial Medicine | 1996

Self-reported carpal tunnel syndrome: predictors of work disability from the National Health Interview Survey Occupational Health Supplement.

Paul D. Blanc; Julia Faucett; James J. Kennedy; Miriam G. Cisternas; Edward H. Yelin

The objective of this study was to identify risk factors for work disability among persons with carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS). The study was designed to analyze data from the Occupational Health Supplement of the National Health Interview Survey, a nationwide, population-based survey. Subjects included 544 survey respondents with self-report of CTS and 32,688 survey respondents without CTS, all aged 18-64 years, and with a history of labor force participation. Measurements were as follows: Dependent variables were work disability, defined either as cessation of employment without attribution of cause or, alternatively, as cessation of employment or job change specifically attributed to CTS by the survey respondent. Independent variables were ergonomic risk of work disability, defined by minutes of workplace repetitive hand and wrist bending for the most recent job held. This measure was derived from responses categorized by an occupation and industry matrix independent of CTS status. Socio-demographic and health status risk factors for work disability were based on the respondent report. The main results were as follows: Among 544 persons with CTS, 58 (11%, CI 8-13%) reported work disability specifically attributed to CTS, representing an estimated national prevalence of 240,578 persons with this limitation. Workplace ergonomic risk, measured as repetitive hand or wrist bending in the occupation and industry of last employment, was a significant factor predictive of CTS-attributed work disability (per 120 min of daily exposure, OR 1.7, CI 1.1-2.6), even after taking into account socio-demographic factors and health status. The conclusions were that work disability among persons with CTS is common. For those with CTS, working conditions characterized by repetitive bending of the hand or wrist may increase the risk of work disability associated with this condition.


AAOHN Journal | 1996

Musculoskeletal symptoms related to video display terminal use: an analysis of objective and subjective exposure estimates.

Julia Faucett; David Rempel

The occupational use of video display terminals (VDTs) has been associated with the increasing incidence of upper extremity musculoskeletal disorders, often called cumulative trauma disorders. To guide clinical and policy decisions about the prevention and treatment of these VDT related disorders, valid and economic measures of total daily VDT use and VDT related job tasks such as data entry or editing will be important. In this study of newspaper reporters and copy editors (n=83), VDT use was measured with employee self reports and by sampling the work behaviors of a subsample of employees. Behavioral sampling estimated VDT use as a characteristic of the job as opposed to a characteristic of individual employee performance. Overall, the two techniques of measuring occupational VDT use compared favorably, with the exception that self reported hours of VDT use tended to exceed the hours of use estimated by behavioral observation for employees who were younger and those who reported greater job demands. The findings suggest that behavioral sampling is a valid technique for estimating VDT use as a job characteristic.


Journal of Agromedicine | 2002

Priority risk factors for back injury in agricultural field work: vineyard ergonomics

James M. Meyers; John A. Miles; Julia Faucett; Ira Janowitz; Diana G. Tejeda; Ed Weber; Rhonda J. Smith; Linda Garcia

ABSTRACT With support of a NIOSH Community Partners grant, the authors reviewed data from three cooperating vineyard companies in Napa and Sonoma Counties, finding both high rates of evidence of musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs) and identifying priority MSD hazards for intervention. Data from OSHA 200 injury report logs identified 29 reported MSDs and 435 lost workdays in a working population of 194 in a 30-month period. The majority of these (20) involved backstrain. High risk job tasks were identified, including: employer-identified tasks, analysis of injury reports, and ergonomics risk factor checklist survey of task work. Triangulating across these three data groups resulted in identification of high priority tasks, including: hand harvest work, hand pruning, and weeding using shovels. Priority risk factors for back injury in these jobs were: repetitive lifting of heavy loads, repetitive exertion of force by the trunk and upper extremities, and repetitive or sustained awkward postures of the trunk (including full stoop and twisting with loads).


Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting | 2000

High Risk Tasks for Musculoskeletal Disorders in Agricultural Field Work

James M. Meyers; Julia Faucett; Diana G. Tejeda; John N. Kabashima; John A. Miles; Ira Janowitz; Victor Duraj; Rhonda J. Smith; Ed Weber

Agricultural work involves heavy physical exertion and is characterized by evidence of high rates of musculoskeletal disorders. Currently ergonomics is a low priority for injury and illness prevention in agriculture. However, based on costs and incidence rates ergonomics risk factors should rank among the highest farm safety priorities. Analysis of field work jobs by the University of California with support from NIOSH yield an industry generalizable set of high risk tasks which should have high intervention priority. These are: repetitive and awkward forward flexion, repetitive lifting and carrying heavy loads, and highly repetitive hand work.

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Ira Janowitz

University of California

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John A. Miles

University of California

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Marion Gillen

University of California

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Niklas Krause

University of California

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Ed Weber

University of California

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Paul D. Blanc

University of California

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