Providing health care and social assistance can take place in people’s homes, such as healthcare home visits, aged care and disability assistance and the wider community such as child care facilities.
This sort of work frequently includes manual tasks which also involves the handling of people in their homes. Refer to the people handling section for further information about this hazardous manual task. Examples of common manual tasks include: assisting with transferring, bathing and dressing clients; pushing wheelchairs; loading and unloading from vehicles; moving furniture; gardening and maintenance tasks; and cleaning and other domestic tasks.
The main causes of injuries and illnesses for those working in people’s homes and the community are lifting, carrying, pushing, pulling; slips, trips and falls; and occupational violence. The workplaces for this industry includes private homes (e.g. a house, unit or caravan, residential care homes, other community settings.
Manual tasks injury risks exist when caring for people in their homes and in the community, and can come from a variety of different sources including:
- Area and layout: eg the house may not be designed for wheelchairs or people requiring assistance.
- Equipment: eg lack of equipment or limitations of equipment such as weight ratings, inappropriate wheel types for environment or load, lack of adjustability or inadequate maintenance.
- Capacity of the person you care for: eg inability to support their own weight due to muscle weakness, inability to understand instructions, have involuntary movements or have side effects from medication such as drowsiness.
- Nature of loads handled: eg overloaded shopping bags.
- Environment: eg poor lighting or wet floors.
- The way you do something: eg working alone, working for long hours or lack of training.
The WA Manual task guide for carers is designed to help carers identify and minimise the risk of injury. It contains information on:
- how musculoskeletal disorders develop;
- how to prevent injuries when performing manual tasks;
- the risk management approach;
- manual tasks that are known to be of high risk to home carers; and
- some examples of high risk manual tasks and ways of minimising the risks.
Further information
Further information about people handling particularly in relation to client assessment, equipment, facility design, work organisation and bariatric issues can be found in the people handling section.
Common hazardous manual tasks: people handling