Relationship between age, workplace slips and the effectiveness of slip-resistant footwear among healthcare workers

Author:

Frost GillianORCID,Liddle Mark,Cockayne SarahORCID,Cunningham-Burley Rachel,Fairhurst Caroline,Torgerson David J

Abstract

ObjectivesTo explore any age-related trend in workplace slip rate and assess the effectiveness of appropriate slip-resistant footwear in preventing workplace slips by age.MethodsSecondary data analysis of the Stopping Slips among Healthcare Workers trial, a two-arm randomised controlled trial conducted between March 2017 and May 2019. 4553 National Health Service (NHS) staff across seven sites in England were randomised 1:1 to the intervention group (provision of 5* GRIP-rated slip-resistant footwear) or the control group (usual work footwear). The primary outcome was self-reported workplace slips, ascertained primarily through weekly text messages throughout the 14-week trial follow-up and analysed using mixed-effects negative binomial regression. This paper reports a control group-only analysis of the association between age and slip rate, and a full intention-to-treat analysis of the effectiveness of slip-resistant footwear by age.ResultsThe mean age of participants was 43 years (range 18–74). In the control group-only analysis, slip rate differed by age (p<0.001) with those aged 60+ having double the slip rate of those aged <30 years (95% CI 1.40 to 2.87). In the intention-to-treat analysis, the interaction between allocation and age was statistically significant (p=0.002). In addition, for all age groups except those aged <30 years, the slip rate in the intervention group was statistically significantly lower than the control group; the smallest incidence rate ratio (ie, the biggest effect) was 0.39 (95% CI 0.24 to 0.64) in the 60+ age group.ConclusionThe provision of appropriate slip-resistant footwear was more effective at reducing workplace slips for older NHS staff.

Funder

NIHR Public Health Research Programme

Health and Safety Executive

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference7 articles.

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