Physical employment standard for Canadian wildland firefighters: examining test-retest reliability and the impact of familiarisation and physical fitness training

Ergonomics. 2018 Oct;61(10):1324-1333. doi: 10.1080/00140139.2018.1464213. Epub 2018 May 4.

Abstract

To assess the impact of repeat performances (familiarisation) plus exercise training on completion time for the Ontario Wildland Firefighter (WFF) Fitness Test circuit (WFX-FIT), normally active general population participants (n = 145) were familiarised to the protocol then randomised into (i) exercise training, (ii) circuit only weekly performances or (iii) controls. At Baseline, the WFX-FIT pass rate for all groups combined was 11% for females and 73% for males, indicating that the Ontario WFX-FIT standard had a possible adverse impact on females. Following test familiarisation, mean circuit completion times improved by 11.9% and 10.2% for females and males, respectively. There were significant improvements in completion time for females (19.8%) and males (16.9%) who trained, plus females (12.2%) and males (9.8%) who performed the circuit only, while control participants were unchanged. Post training, the pass rate of the training group was 80% for females and 100% for males. Practitioner Summary: This paper details the impact of familiarisation plus exercise training as accommodation to mitigate potential adverse impact on initial attack wildland firefighter test performance. The results underscore the importance of test familiarisation opportunities and physical fitness training programmes that are specific to the demands of the job.

Keywords: BFOR; accommodation; adverse impact; occupational fitness screening.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Canada
  • Employment / standards*
  • Exercise
  • Female
  • Firefighters*
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Physical Conditioning, Human*
  • Physical Education and Training
  • Physical Fitness*
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Task Performance and Analysis*
  • Wildfires*