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The current project is a safety and health intervention focused on sleep and fatigue among truck driver teams (pairs), where one driver sleeps in a moving vehicle while the other partner drives. This study is conducted within the Oregon Healthy Workforce Center (OHWC), a NIOSH Center of Excellence in Total Worker Health. We will evaluate engineering and behavioral interventions to improve sleep, reduce fatigue, and impact Total Worker Health. An enhanced cab intervention will alter whole body vibrations during driving and sleep periods, and includes a therapeutic mattress system and an active suspension seat. The enhanced cab will be evaluated alone and in combination with a behavioral sleep intervention adapted from our effective SHIFT (Safety &Health Involvement For Truckers) program. The interventions prioritize hazard reduction according to the hierarchy of controls, and will be evaluated with a randomized controlled design.
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Total Worker Health® (TWH) is defined as policies, programs, and practices that integrate protection from work-related safety and health hazards with promotion of injury and illness prevention efforts to advance worker well-being. Sleep deficiency is a cross-cutting factor for TWH that not only impacts workplace safety, but also generates excess risk for obesity, chronic disease, and early mortality. Long-haul truck drivers average less sleep per night on the road than they do when sleeping at home due to long, irregular work hours and unfavorable sleeping conditions in truck sleeper berths (e.g., low quality mattresses, vibrations, noise, temperature). Sleep deficiency in trucking is a likely contributor to the 69% prevalence of obesity among US drivers, which increases the risk of obstructive sleep apnea and deadly crashes. Despite the severity of these interacting problems, research on engineering controls in commercial truck cabs to improve sleep and reduce fatigue is limited. Behavioral interventions to improve sleep among truck drivers are also limited. We must address these gaps and evaluate the economic cost-utility of interventions to stimulate industry investment in factors that substantially improve drivers' TWH.
The primary goal of this proposal is to evaluate the effects of an enhanced cab intervention on long-haul truck drivers' sleep and TWH with a randomized controlled design. A secondary goal is to evaluate the additive effects of a behavioral sleep intervention. We focus on truck driver teams (pairs), where one driver sleeps in a moving vehicle while the other partner drives, who experience twice as many awakenings as solo drivers. Our enhanced cab intervention will alter whole body vibrations during driving and sleep periods, and includes a therapeutic mattress system with anti-vibration characteristics (Thevorest) and an active suspension seat (BoseRide III). The enhanced cab will be evaluated alone and in combination with a behavioral sleep intervention adapted from our effective SHIFT program. Our preliminary studies show that the therapeutic mattress system alters vibrations and is strongly preferred by drivers, the active suspension seat reduces vibration exposure and fatigue, and that SHIFT produces robust health behavior changes. Our primary hypotheses are that relative to a control group, the enhanced cab intervention will improve objective measures of (a) sleep duration and quality, (b) fatigue, and (c) driver performance. We will also measure impacts on musculoskeletal pain, well-being, and health behaviors (diet, physical activity). We also hypothesize that intervention effects will be larger when combined with a behavioral sleep intervention. Our propensity for success is bolstered by our unique prior accomplishments and strong trucking industry support. To accomplish our goals and test our hypotheses we propose a 5-year project to accomplish 3 specific aims:
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49 participants in 2 patient groups
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Ryan Olson, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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