Drying laundry on bamboo poles in confined spaces puts Singaporean homemakers – housewives and househusbands – at increased risk of musculoskeletal disorders, the first-ever biomechanical study of laundry-related housework has revealed.
Singapore’s pipe–socket system involves attaching washed clothes onto a series of bamboo poles, which are then slotted into sockets outside kitchen windows, much like flagpoles. One of two main systems (the other involving two plates supporting both ends of the laundry pole), the pipe–socket system is provided in the older public housing estates, which house the majority of the country’s population. This unique system enables laundry drying in the humid city where open space is at a premium and tumble dryers are scarce.
Singapore's pipe–socket laundry drying system
But with homemakers – those responsible for compulsory household maintenance work – comprising 2 in 10 of those presenting upper-limb musculoskeletal disorders at Singapore’s hospitals, occupational therapists set out to investigate why drying laundry can cause such pain.
Five homemakers drying a standardised basket of laundry in their own homes were videoed by a team led by Lee Hong Rui, Principal Occupational Therapist at Singapore General Hospital, and who completed the study as part of her MSc in Occupational Therapy at Brunel University London in the UK. The researchers used the Rapid Entire Body Assessment (REBA) method to analyse each of nine distinct tasks in laundry drying and assess the risk posed to each homemakers.
The most taxing tasks involved retrieving bamboo poles from the typically high overhead racks at the beginning of the process, and returning the poles at the end, presenting high musculoskeletal risk. Overall, laundry drying posed a medium risk to participants, with an average REBA score of 4.3 to 5.4 – significantly higher than the safe value of 2.
The bamboo poles are usually stored in high overhead racks
“Our study showed that narrow workspaces and this unique practice of laundry drying result in homemakers adopting extreme or awkward postures,” said Ms Lee. “Standing on tiptoes to reach poles, reaching out of windows – often stretching over household equipment such as the washing machine – to insert poles into sockets, and doing all of this repetitively and with poor posture, all present risks to the neck, trunk, shoulder and wrist.”
Repetitive motions in extreme positions can cause a reduction in how well muscles perform – their functional capacity. Homemakers can compensate using coping strategies, but these often result in poorer posture, such as increased trunk twisting or shoulder elevation. Over time, this can result in conditions such as carpal tunnel syndrome, rotator cuff tendonitis and tension neck syndrome.
The findings provide some potential directions to assist homemakers in formulating control strategies, such as:
- reorganising a workspace to reduce the need to over-stretch
- using an assistive stick to retrieve and return bamboo poles to avoid having to stand on tiptoes
- adopting work–rest strategies to avoid muscle fatigue, given that the highest average REBA score was seen when working with bamboo pole number three out of six.
“This is the first quantitative study, with concrete evidence on the positive association between the physical work environment of homemakers in Singapore and their musculoskeletal risk exposure,” added Ms Lee.
“Our recommendations can also be used by clinicians to provide preventive intervention strategies to homemakers during consultation, reducing the burden that future injuries would pose to individuals and to the Singapore healthcare system.”
, by Lee Hong Rui, Therma Wai Chun Cheung, Yang Zixian and Anna Pratt, is published in the December 2018 issue of WORK: A Journal of Prevention, Assessment & Rehabilitation.
The image of the building exterior is under a . The other images are reprinted from WORK: A Journal of Prevention, Vol. 61(3), Lee Hong Rui, Therma Wai Chun Cheung, Yang Zixian, Anna Pratt, ‘A pilot study: Exploring the musculoskeletal risk exposure associated with drying laundry using the public housing pipe-socket system amongst women in Singapore’, pp. 449–461, Copyright 2018, with permission from IOS Press. The publication is available at IOS Press through .
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Joe Buchanunn,
Media Relations
+44 (0)1895 268821
joe.buchanunn@brunel.ac.uk