Developing physical and physiological employment standards: Translation of job analysis findings to assessments and performance standards – A systematic review
Physical employment standards (PES) are developed with the aim of ensuring that an employee's physical and physiological capacities are commensurate with the demands of their occupation. While previous commentaries and narrative reviews have provided frameworks for the development of PES, this...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International journal of industrial ergonomics 2016-11, Vol.56, p.9-16 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Physical employment standards (PES) are developed with the aim of ensuring that an employee's physical and physiological capacities are commensurate with the demands of their occupation. While previous commentaries and narrative reviews have provided frameworks for the development of PES, this is the first systematic review of the methods used to translate job analysis findings to PES tests and performance standards for physically demanding occupations. A search of PubMed and Google Scholar was conducted for research articles published in English up to and including March 2015. Two authors independently reviewed and extracted data.
The search yielded 87 potentially eligible papers, including 60 peer reviewed journal articles and 17 technical reports. 57 papers were excluded leading to a final data set of 31 papers, representing 22 studies. Job analysis was most commonly conducted through subjective determination of job tasks followed by objective quantification and validation. Determination of criterion tasks was evenly distributed through subjective and objective methods with criterion tasks being defined most commonly as most demanding, critical and/or frequent. Generic predictive and task-related predictive tests were more commonly observed in isolation or in combination when compared to task simulation tests. Performance standards were more commonly criterion-referenced than norm-referenced with a variety of statistical methods utilised. This review provides recommendations for researchers when developing physical employment standards for a variety of occupations.
•A systematic review was conducted on the development of PES.•The final dataset included 31 papers representing 22 studies.•A wide variety of methods were used in to develop PES tests and standards.•We recommend clear documentation of each step in the PES process in future studies. |
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ISSN: | 0169-8141 1872-8219 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ergon.2016.08.006 |