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Evaluating the physical demands on firefighters using hand-carried stair descent devices to evacuate mobility-limited occupants from high-rise buildings

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Article

Lavender, Steven A. ; Hedman, Glenn E. ; Mehta, Jay P. ; Reichelt, Paul A. ; Conrad, Karen M. ; Park, Sanghyun

Applied Ergonomics

2014

45

3

389-397

disabled person ; manual handling ; measurement of physical workload ; physical workload ; workload assessment ; fire fighter

Ergonomics and work environment

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.apergo.2013.05.005

English

Bibliogr.

"The physical demands on firefighting personnel were investigated when using different types of hand-carried stair descent devices designed for the emergency evacuation of high rise buildings as a function of staircase width and evacuation urgency. Twelve firefighters used three hand-carried stair descent devices during simulated urgent and non-urgent evacuations. The devices were evaluated under three staircase width conditions (0.91, 1.12, and 1.32 m). For comparison, an urgent manual carry was also performed on the 1.12 m wide stairs. Dependent measures included electromyographic (EMG) data, heart rates, Borg Scale ratings, task durations and descent velocities. Results indicated that the stair chair with extended front handles, which allows the front person to descend the stairs facing forward, reduced the time integrated back muscle EMG by half and showed a descent velocity that was 1.8 times faster than the other stair descent devices in the study. There were no differences across staircase widths."

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