This study is an analysis on 25,291 manual materials handling (MMH) tasks o
btained from 2442 reports from industrial locations throughout the US. The
tasks consisted of 10,101 lifts, 7461 lowers, 1879 pushes, 1866 pulls and 3
984 carries. The purpose of the study was to determine the percent distribu
tion of each of the task parameters, i.e., weight, height, distance, and fr
equency. Secondly, the study compared the percent of reports from key indus
trial classifications to percent of compensation costs associated with MMH
in those classifications. Analyses of the percent distributions revealed th
at many basic ergonomic considerations for MMH have been ignored. Redesign
strategies should be focused toward minimizing hand distances, decreasing l
oads of lifts, lowers, and carries, decreasing frequencies of tasks, increa
sing heights of start of lifts, and decreasing distances of carries, pushes
, and pulls. There should also be a continued effort to decrease the number
of lifts and lowers which comprise 69% of the tasks surveyed. Ratios of pe
rcent of reports in key industrial classifications to the percent of compen
sation costs associated with MMH in those classifications indicate higher r
atios in manufacturing, durable, and non-durable categories and low ratios
in service, trucking and construction categories. It is concluded that cont
inued effort should be extended toward redesign of MMH tasks and components
of tasks that violate good ergonomic principles.