Taping has been suggested to reduce the incidence of tendinopathy in tree planters. However, the ability of taping to reduce wrist postures during planting has not yet been formally evaluated.… Click to show full abstract
Taping has been suggested to reduce the incidence of tendinopathy in tree planters. However, the ability of taping to reduce wrist postures during planting has not yet been formally evaluated. The primary aim was to test the effect of rigid taping on wrist postures during tree planting tasks. Eleven tree planters planted up to 50 trees in three conditions: no-tape (NT), tape-on-the-dorsum-of-the-hand (T1) and tape-on-the-thumb (T2) in a randomized cross-over, within-participant, repeat-measures design. Electrogoniometers (EG) recorded continuous wrist postures. Digital video recordings were used to segment EG traces of each planting cycle (one planted tree) into 4 kinematically distinct Phases. The tree and shovel wrist were analyzed separately. Tree-wrist peak ulnar deviation and frequency of shovel-wrist awkward frontal plane postures were significantly reduced in the T2 condition. Taping may be effective at reducing non-neutral postures and should be researched further to determine its effectiveness in reducing tree planting injuries.
               
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