U.S. Army physical demands study: Prevalence and frequency of performing physically demanding tasks in deployed and non-deployed settings

To compare percentages of on-duty time spent performing physically demanding soldier tasks in non-deployed and deployed settings, and secondarily examine the number of physically demanding tasks performed among five Army combat arms occupational specialties. Job task analysis. Soldiers (n=1295; over...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of science and medicine in sport 2017-11, Vol.20 (S4), p.S57-S61
Hauptverfasser: Boye, Michael W., Cohen, Bruce S., Sharp, Marilyn A., Canino, Maria C., Foulis, Stephen A., Larcom, Kathleen, Smith, Laurel
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:To compare percentages of on-duty time spent performing physically demanding soldier tasks in non-deployed and deployed settings, and secondarily examine the number of physically demanding tasks performed among five Army combat arms occupational specialties. Job task analysis. Soldiers (n=1295; over 99% serving on active duty) across five Army jobs completed one of three questionnaires developed using reviews of job and task related documents, input from subject matter experts, observation of task performance, and conduct of focus groups. Soldiers reported estimates of the total on-duty time spent performing physically demanding tasks in both deployed and non-deployed settings. One-way analyses of variance and Duncan post-hoc tests were used to compare percentage time differences by job. Two-tailed t-tests were used to evaluate differences by setting. Frequency analyses were used to present supplementary findings. Soldiers reported performing physically demanding job-specific tasks 17.7% of the time while non-deployed and 19.6% of the time while deployed. There were significant differences in time spent on job-specific tasks across settings (p
ISSN:1440-2440
1878-1861
DOI:10.1016/j.jsams.2017.08.014