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Occupational & Industrial Medicine, Employees - Health & Safety, Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, Orthopedics, Biomechanics
Hard Work:Defining Physical Work Performance Requirements by Brian Sharkey β€” book cover

Hard Work:Defining Physical Work Performance Requirements

by Brian Sharkey, Paul Davis
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Overview

Hard Work: Defining Physical Work Performance Requirements focuses on physically demanding occupations that require strength and stamina, such as law enforcement, structural and wildland firefighting, mining, forestry, and the military. It is the first book to examine the relationship of recruitment practices, physical training, and physical evaluation to the intricate environment of corporations, labor organizations, the legal system, and employment rights.

Hard Work assists readers in making intelligent and informed decisions resulting in a safer, healthier, and more productive work force. Authors Brian Sharkey and Paul Davis have spent more than 70 years combined researching worker performance in physically demanding professions. Hard Work brings their perspective as exercise scientists to an examination of these factors:

-Work requirements and capacity for physically demanding jobs

-Physical characteristics of the β€œathlete-worker,” including aerobic and muscular fitness

-Test development, validation, and utilization in employee selection

-Employee health and job-related fitness

-Environmental factors affecting employee performance, such as heat, cold, and altitude

-Respiratory protection and lifting guidelines

-Legal aspects of employment, consequences of legal decisions, and a proposed alternative to litigation By using case studies and real-life examples of tests and programs, the authors teach readers how to evaluate recruits and maintain employee health and safety. The book also includes nine appendixes offering valuable perspectives on testing, job-related fitness, policies, procedures, and performance assessment.

Hard Work: Defining Physical Work Performance Requirements is organized into five parts. Part I begins with definitions of the physically demanding occupation and characteristics of workers available for employment. The legal aspects of employment are also considered, including reference to age, gender, race, and disability.

Part II examines the value of initial and periodic evaluations, the test development process, and issues related to testing. Additionally, part II contains an examination of the effects of court decisions and labor unions on the evaluation processes of both new and incumbent employees.

Part III discusses implementation of recruit testing designed to determine those individuals who can and cannot perform the job. The inherent challenges in shifting from recruit testing to periodic tests for incumbents are described, and ways to evaluate the costs and benefits of testing and training programs are examined.

In part IV, the values and limits of medical examinations and employee wellness programs are considered. Part IV also discusses work physiology and its relationship to performance and presents the job-related physical fitness program as the essential element required for preserving career-long performance and health.

Part V discusses employee performance in extreme environments, respiratory protection devices and their impact on the worker, and guidelines designed to reduce the risk of back injuries. It concludes with an examination of legal issues and a proposed alternative to litigation using a collective approach that avoids confrontation and biased testimony and saves taxpayer money.

Hard Work: Defining Physical Work Performance Requirements suggests how workers could benefit by working up to job requirements while maintaining their health, safety, and job performance. This unique text seeks to bring about a paradigm shift wherein workers are viewed as occupational athletes who, aided by effective recruitment, testing, and training, receive the necessary support to help them excel in their physically demanding workplace.

Synopsis

Hard Work: Defining Physical Work Performance Requirements focuses on physically demanding occupations that require strength and stamina, such as law enforcement, structural and wildland firefighting, mining, forestry, and the military. It is the first book to examine the relationship of recruitment practices, physical training, and physical evaluation to the intricate environment of corporations, labor organizations, the legal system, and employment rights.

Hard Work assists readers in making intelligent and informed decisions resulting in a safer, healthier, and more productive work force. Authors Brian Sharkey and Paul Davis have spent more than 70 years combined researching worker performance in physically demanding professions. Hard Work brings their perspective as exercise scientists to an examination of these factors:

  • Work requirements and capacity for physically demanding jobs
  • Physical characteristics of the "athlete-worker," including aerobic and muscular fitness
  • Test development, validation, and utilization in employee selection
  • Employee health and job-related fitness
  • Environmental factors affecting employee performance, such as heat, cold, and altitude
  • Respiratory protection and lifting guidelines
  • Legal aspects of employment, consequences of legal decisions, and a proposed alternative to litigation
By using case studies and real-life examples of tests and programs, the authors teach readers how to evaluate recruits and maintain employee health and safety. The book also includes nine appendixes offering valuable perspectives on testing, job-related fitness, policies, procedures, andperformance assessment.

Hard Work: Defining Physical Work Performance Requirements is organized into five parts. Part I begins with definitions of the physically demanding occupation and characteristics of workers available for employment. The legal aspects of employment are also considered, including reference to age, gender, race, and disability.

Part II examines the value of initial and periodic evaluations, the test development process, and issues related to testing. Additionally, part II contains an examination of the effects of court decisions and labor unions on the evaluation processes of both new and incumbent employees.

Part III discusses implementation of recruit testing designed to determine those individuals who can and cannot perform the job. The inherent challenges in shifting from recruit testing to periodic tests for incumbents are described, and ways to evaluate the costs and benefits of testing and training programs are examined.

In part IV, the values and limits of medical examinations and employee wellness programs are considered. Part IV also discusses work physiology and its relationship to performance and presents the job-related physical fitness program as the essential element required for preserving career-long performance and health.

Part V discusses employee performance in extreme environments, respiratory protection devices and their impact on the worker, and guidelines designed to reduce the risk of back injuries. It concludes with an examination of legal issues and a proposed alternative to litigation using a collective approach that avoids confrontation and biased testimony and saves taxpayer money.

Hard Work: Defining Physical Work Performance Requirements suggests how workers could benefit by working up to job requirements while maintaining their health, safety, and job performance. This unique text seeks to bring about a paradigm shift wherein workers are viewed as occupational athletes who, aided by effective recruitment, testing, and training, receive the necessary support to help them excel in their physically demanding workplace.

Doody Review Services

Reviewer:J. Thomas Pierce, MBBS PhD(Navy Environmental Health Center)
Description:This is an athletic-based (or exercise-based) means of looking at the features of hard, physical work. It asks the most central of all occupational questions, "What is required to perform a series of physical tasks in order to maintain one's job?" While this question may seem obvious, it has only rarely been raised in any sort of logical manner and even less frequently addressed. This book's subtitle provides an additional view of what it is all about.
Purpose:The authors have sought to write the first book of its kind in order to educate broad groups of professionals and other workers about the best means of evaluating demanding jobs, the process of test development and validation, and the principles of employee selection. They go on to provide additional data and useful approaches to employee health, physiology, and subsequent job-related performance.
Audience:They have attempted to appeal to physiologists, physicians, and other healthcare providers, managers and employees, the government and legal communities and legislative staffs.
Features:The book is divided into five major sections of three to four chapters that move through job description, employee testing and selection, physiology, and certain job-related issues. Part IV is representative of the authors' approach. This part addresses employee health in terms of standards development, program costs, the physiology of work (written in terms of the properties of muscles, oxygen, and energy sources) and issues of job-related fitness. The appendixes pass along information for readers who want to know more about a specialized topic, such as work output as a function of selectivity in the hiring process.
Assessment:This is the best scientific book I have read in five years. It masterfully describes what is known about physical work requirements, but defers what is not well understood to future research efforts. What is best about the book is that its authors don't back off complexities because medicine, law, and exercise science must be blended, along with other subjects. The photographs, along with the boxed case studies and vignettes, are outstanding. The authors' broad experience level is unmistakable in this book's execution.

About the Author, Brian Sharkey

Brian J. Sharkey, PhD, is a physiologist in the Technology and Development Center at the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Forest Service in Missoula, Montana, where he researches fitness, health, and work capacity. Previously, Sharkey served as director of the University of Montana's Human Performance Laboratory and remains associated with the university and lab as professor emeritus.

As a leading fitness researcher, educator, and author, Sharkey has more than 40 years of experience in both exercise and work physiology, including research with wildland firefighters. For contributions to the health, safety, and performance of firefighters, Sharkey received the USDA's Superior Service Award in 1977 and its Distinguished Service Award in 1993.

Sharkey is a past president of the American College of Sports Medicine and served on the NCAA committee on competitive safeguards and medical aspects of sports, where he chaired the Sports Science and Safety subcommittee, which uses research and data on injury to improve the safety of intercollegiate athletes. He also coordinated the United States Ski Team Nordic Sports Medicine Council.

In his leisure time, Sharkey enjoys cross-country and alpine skiing, road and mountain biking, running, hiking, and canoeing. He lives near his grandchildren in Missoula, Montana.

Paul O. Davis, III, PhD, is the president of the First Responder Institute in Burtonsville, Maryland, where he has conducted job and medical standards development for hundreds of public safety and military organizations. He is a former firefighter/paramedic and as a member of the Fire Board of Montgomery County responsible for thedevelopment of definitive medical care outside of the hospital.

As an expert witness, Davis has made more than 60 appearances in federal and state court and was recruited by the FBI to participate in legal defense of physical standards. He was also selected by the United States Marine Corps to validate the physical fitness test (PFT) and to conduct certification of the physical training unit staff at the FBI Academy at Quantico, Virginia. Most recently he was engaged by the Department of Homeland Defense to develop hiring and retention standards for the reorganized Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE-D). He is the creator of several TV sports productions including the Firefighter Combat Challenge providing color commentary on ESPN, A&E, and the Versus network.

Davis is a fellow of the American College of Sports Medicine. He received his PhD in exercise science in 1976 from the University of Maryland.

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Editorials

From The Critics

Reviewer: J. Thomas Pierce, MBBS PhD(Navy Environmental Health Center)
Description: "This is an athletic-based (or exercise-based) means of looking at the features of hard, physical work. It asks the most central of all occupational questions, "What is required to perform a series of physical tasks in order to maintain one's job?" While this question may seem obvious, it has only rarely been raised in any sort of logical manner and even less frequently addressed. This book's subtitle provides an additional view of what it is all about. "
Purpose: "The authors have sought to write the first book of its kind in order to educate broad groups of professionals and other workers about the best means of evaluating demanding jobs, the process of test development and validation, and the principles of employee selection. They go on to provide additional data and useful approaches to employee health, physiology, and subsequent job-related performance. "
Audience: They have attempted to appeal to physiologists, physicians, and other healthcare providers, managers and employees, the government and legal communities and legislative staffs.
Features: The book is divided into five major sections of three to four chapters that move through job description, employee testing and selection, physiology, and certain job-related issues. Part IV is representative of the authors' approach. This part addresses employee health in terms of standards development, program costs, the physiology of work (written in terms of the properties of muscles, oxygen, and energy sources) and issues of job-related fitness. The appendixes pass along information for readers who want to know more about a specialized topic, such as work output as a function of selectivity in the hiring process.
Assessment: This is the best scientific book I have read in five years. It masterfully describes what is known about physical work requirements, but defers what is not well understood to future research efforts. What is best about the book is that its authors don't back off complexities because medicine, law, and exercise science must be blended, along with other subjects. The photographs, along with the boxed case studies and vignettes, are outstanding. The authors' broad experience level is unmistakable in this book's execution.

Book Details

Published
January 1, 2008
Publisher
Human Kinetics Publishers
Pages
256
Format
Other Format
ISBN
9780736065368

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