WORK-RELATED ILLNESS
Clinical trials for WORK-RELATED ILLNESS explained in plain language.
Never miss a new study
Get alerted when new WORK-RELATED ILLNESS trials appear
Sign up with your email to follow new studies for WORK-RELATED ILLNESS, keep track of the ones that matter, and come back to a personal dashboard instead of checking manually.
By submitting, you agree to our Terms of use
-
Milking without aching: study tests exercise for Farmers' pain
Symptom relief Recruiting nowThis study looks at whether learning better work techniques (ergonomics) and doing structured exercises can help reduce muscle and joint pain in female dairy farmers. Sixty women who have been farming for at least five years will take part. The goal is to see if these approaches …
Matched conditions: WORK-RELATED ILLNESS
Phase: NA • Sponsor: Uskudar University • Aim: Symptom relief
Last updated May 17, 2026 13:54 UTC
-
Butchers' back pain targeted in new posture study
Symptom relief Recruiting nowThis study tests a special posture training program for butchers who often have neck and upper back pain from their work. About 50 butchers in Istanbul will take part to see if the training improves their pain, posture, and sleep quality. The goal is to help them feel better and …
Matched conditions: WORK-RELATED ILLNESS
Phase: NA • Sponsor: Uskudar University • Aim: Symptom relief
Last updated May 13, 2026 15:59 UTC
-
Pastry chefs knead relief: exercise and ergonomics trial aims to curb chronic pain
Symptom relief Recruiting nowThis study tests whether combining exercise with ergonomics training can reduce work-related muscle and joint pain in pastry chefs. About 60 chefs with at least 5 years of experience will participate. Researchers will measure pain, burnout, sleep quality, and arm function to see …
Matched conditions: WORK-RELATED ILLNESS
Phase: NA • Sponsor: Uskudar University • Aim: Symptom relief
Last updated May 13, 2026 15:58 UTC
-
Building better health: exercise and ergonomics trial for construction workers
Symptom relief Recruiting nowThis study tests whether adding specific exercises to standard ergonomics training helps construction workers sleep better, feel less burned out, and have less pain. Researchers will enroll 52 men aged 25-55 who have had back, knee, neck, wrist, or shoulder pain for at least 3 mo…
Matched conditions: WORK-RELATED ILLNESS
Phase: NA • Sponsor: Uskudar University • Aim: Symptom relief
Last updated May 04, 2026 16:22 UTC