Self-Reported Fatigue and Injury Risk in Paramedics

Main Article Content

Graham Marvin Elisa F. D. Canetti Ben Schram Robin Orr

Abstract

Background: Paramedics routinely operate in high-stress environments and endure long working hours, contributing to elevated occupational fatigue and increased injury risk. The study aimed to compare fatigue levels between injured and non-injured paramedics and examine associations between self-reported fatigue and self-reported injury among paramedics. 


Methods: An online survey of paramedics (n=22) assessed self-reported fatigue and injury history using the Occupational Fatigue Exhaustion Recovery Scale and targeted Likert-based questions, with scores transformed to quantify chronic fatigue, acute fatigue, and inter-shift recovery to identify point prevalence. Data were analysed to compare acute and chronic fatigue scores with injury status. 


Results: Higher chronic fatigue scores were significantly associated with self-reported injuries within the past six months. No significant differences were found in levels of acute fatigue, inter-shift recovery, or perceived fatigue on rest days between those who were and were not injured. Beliefs about fatigue-related injury risk were consistent across injured and non-injured groups. 


Conclusion: Chronic fatigue may be a key indicator of injury risk among paramedics. These findings highlight the need for proactive, system-level fatigue management strategies that extend beyond subjective measures and address chronic fatigue as a quantifiable operational risk.

Keywords: paramedics, injury, fatigue, assessment

Article Details

How to Cite
MARVIN, Graham et al. Self-Reported Fatigue and Injury Risk in Paramedics. Medical Research Archives, [S.l.], v. 14, n. 1, jan. 2026. ISSN 2375-1924. Available at: <https://esmed.org/MRA/mra/article/view/7144>. Date accessed: 03 feb. 2026. doi: https://doi.org/10.18103/mra.v14i1.7144.
Section
Research Articles

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