A
Alireza Choobineh
Researcher at Shiraz University of Medical Sciences
Publications - 164
Citations - 3276
Alireza Choobineh is an academic researcher from Shiraz University of Medical Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Shift work. The author has an hindex of 29, co-authored 144 publications receiving 2726 citations. Previous affiliations of Alireza Choobineh include Tehran University of Medical Sciences.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The Impact of Job Stress and Job Satisfaction on Workforce Productivity in an Iranian Petrochemical Industry.
Naser Hoboubi,Alireza Choobineh,Fatemeh Kamari Ghanavati,Sareh Keshavarzi,Ali Akbar Hosseini +4 more
TL;DR: Investigating the job stress, job satisfaction, and workforce productivity levels, and identifying factors associated with productivity decrement among employees of an Iranian petrochemical industry found that productivity was significantly associated with shift schedule, the second and the third dimensions of job stress (role insufficiency and role ambiguity), and the second dimension of job satisfaction.
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Musculoskeletal problems among workers of an Iranian rubber factory.
TL;DR: The most common ergonomics problems were found to be awkward postures and manual material handling in the workplace andCorrective measures for reducing risk level seemed essential.
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Perceived Demands and Musculoskeletal Disorders in Operating Room Nurses of Shiraz City Hospitals
TL;DR: It could be concluded that operation room was not only a physically but also psychologically demanding environment and any interventional program for preventing or reducing MSDs among OR nurses had to focus on reducing physical demands, particularly excessive MMH demands as well as considering psychological aspect of working environment.
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Musculoskeletal symptoms as related to ergonomic factors in Iranian hand-woven carpet industry and general guidelines for workstation design.
TL;DR: The results revealed that the prevalence rates for symptoms in different body regions were high as compared to the general Iranian population and major ergonomic factors associated with musculoskeletal symptoms were loom type, working posture, daily working time and seat type.
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Association between perceived demands and musculoskeletal disorders among hospital nurses of Shiraz University of Medical Sciences: a questionnaire survey.
TL;DR: It was concluded that any intervention program for preventing MSDs among SUMS hospital nurses had to focus on reducing physical demands, particularly excessive postural demands.