Association between Musculoskeletal Subjective Symptoms and the MMPI (Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory) Profile of Female VDT Operators.
- Author:
Jae Cheol SONG
1
;
Weon Young LEE
;
Young Jun KWON
;
Mo Ran KI
;
Soo Jin LEE
;
Si Bok PARK
;
Jung Hyun NAHM
Author Information
1. Department of Preventive Medicine, College of Medicine, Hanyang University, Korea.
- Publication Type:Original Article
- Keywords:
VDT(Video or Visual Display Terminal);
Subjective symptom;
MMPI
- MeSH:
Arm;
Elbow;
Female*;
Hand;
Humans;
MMPI*;
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (U.S.);
Neck;
Questionnaires;
Seoul;
Shoulder;
Sick Leave;
Telecommunications;
Weights and Measures
- From:Korean Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine
1998;10(4):599-609
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:Korean
-
Abstract:
A study was conducted to assess the association between musculoskeletal subjective symptoms and the MMPI(Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory) profile. The study subjects were 539 female operators of telecommunication company in Seoul, and were interviewed with subjective symptom questionnaire and MMPI. Results were as follows 1. 77.5% of the study subjects complained subjective symptoms on the shoulder, 73.8% on the neck, 71.8% on the lower back, 67.5% on the arm, 67.2% on the hand, 39.8% on the elbow, respectively. According to NIOSH symptom criteria, 63% complained on the shoulder, 57.4%, 54.6% on the lower back, 53.2% on the hand, 45.9% on the arm, 29.8% on the elbow, respectively. 2. Among the MMPI clinical scales, Hs(Hypochondriasis), Hy(Hystria) and Dep (Depression) scales showed significant differences according to the numbers of subjective symptom(NIOSH criteria), VAS(Visual Analogue Scale), and the experience of sick leave (each by ANOVA, p<0.05). 3. The association between the numbers of subjective symptom site for NIOSH symptom criteria, the personal history of sick leave and the MMPI profile that has more than 70 points in anything of Hs, Dep and Hy scales was showed significantly (each by x(2)-test, p<0.05).