Scand J Work Environ Health Online-first -article pdf
https://doi.org/10.5271/sjweh.4288 | Published online: 06 Apr 2026
Standardizing upper arm movement definitions across observational and sensor-based methods: A Delphi consensus study among European ergonomics experts
Objectives Musculoskeletal disorders from repetitive upper arm movements contribute substantially to sickness absence and productivity loss. Despite widespread use of observational and sensor-based assessments, inconsistent definitions hinder comparison across studies and translation to practice. This study explored threshold criteria for defining upper arm movements and static postures across observational and sensor-based approaches and examined conceptual differences between practical observability and biomechanical measurability.
Methods We conducted a two-round Delphi study following the ACCORD guidelines. We invited 35 European experts to rate agreement on proposed definitions. A consensus criterion was set to ≥75% agreement. A thematic analysis of free-text responses guided definition revisions between rounds.
Results Fifteen (43%) and fourteen (93% retention) completed rounds 1 and 2, respectively. Consensus defined a fast-paced movement as ≤1 second (80% agreement) and static posture as ≥4 seconds with ±5° movements (87% agreement). No agreement emerged regarding the minimum amplitude threshold for defining an arm movement (eg, 10° versus 20°; 53% agreement). Experts’ comments reflected a tension between observability, favoring higher amplitude thresholds, and biomechanical relevance, favoring lower thresholds, while highlighting velocity’s importance.
Conclusions Expert consensus on time-based thresholds for fast-paced movements and static postures provides a starting point for standardized ergonomic assessment. The absence of consensus on amplitude thresholds highlights the need for field validation studies examining which thresholds capture measurement reliability and prediction of musculoskeletal health outcomes. These findings support efforts toward transparency and alignment in upper arm exposure definitions across research and practice, while acknowledging remaining conceptual and methodological challenges.
Key terms Delphi; Delphi consensus study; delphi technique; elevated arm work; ergonomic assessment; ergonomics; movement definition; sensor-based method; static posture; upper arm
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