The Nuts and Bolts of the Revised Strain Index & NIOSH Lift Equation
 
Faculty Bios
 
Melissa Afterman MS-HFE, CPE
Senior Ergonomist & Project Manager
VSI Consulting
Melissa Afterman is a Senior Ergonomist and Project Manager with VSI Consulting. She earned her Bachelor’s degree from Cal Poly SLO in BioResource/Agricultural Engineering with a Dance Minor, and her Master's degree in Human Factors/Ergonomics Engineering from San Jose State University. Since the turn of the century, Melissa has provided human factors and ergonomics consulting services, specializing in biotechonolgy and pharmaceutical R&D and manufacturing work environments. She also enjoys developing ergonomics programs and educational resources. Melissa is a Board Certified Professional Ergonomist (CPE) and a member of the San Francisco Bay Area Ergonomics Roundtable (BAER).
 
Alan Barr
Principal Development Engineer, Ergonomics Program
UC Berkeley
Alan Barr is Principal Development Engineer for the Ergonomics Program at UC Berkeley. His undergraduate degree was the biomechanics track of the Exercise Science BS degree at Davis. Ever since completing that degree, almost 20 years ago, he has been studying how the human body interacts with and responds to physical factors in the real world. He has a strong curiosity and understanding of the physical demands placed on the human body during a wide range of human activity. For the last 17 years he has been employed as an engineer with the Division of Occupational and Environmental Medicine at UCSF and the primary engineer for the Ergonomics Graduate Training Program at UC Berkeley. He has spent the last 13 years collaborating on research related directly to health and safety issues surrounding the use of hand-operated drills as they are used in concrete drilling. As part of his research, he has designed and built many prototypes to be formally studied as effective interventions in mitigating potentially harmful effects associated with traditional drilling methods. He has also been the primary engineer on three CPWR/NIOSH funded projects designing and evaluating jigs and other interventions for concrete drilling that have led to several peer reviewed publications.
 
Carisa Harris PhD, CPE, PT
Director
UCSF/UCB Ergonomics Research & Graduate Training Program
Dr. Harris is Assistant Professor in the Department of Medicine at UC San Francisco and in the School of Public Health at UC Berkeley. She is also the Director of the UCSF/UCB Ergonomics Research & Graduate Training Program. Dr. Harris’ current research ranges from epidemiological studies on healthy worker survivor bias in the assessment of physical, personal and work psychosocial factors associated with Carpal Tunnel Syndrome and subsequent work disability to the development of personal monitoring devices to quantify physical exposures on the individual level. She also collaborates on numerous other projects at the UC Ergonomics lab that explore the ergonomic improvements for endoscopists, hand-arm computer interactions (gestures), work related cardiovascular strain, sedantarianism and the impact of exoskeleton devices on manual material handlers.
 
Meg Honan RPT, MS, CPE
Principal Ergonomist
Genentech
Meg Honan is Principal Ergonomist at Genentech, California. Her ergonomics experience has focused on employee work area and work method assessment, and ergonomics program development in Plant, Laboratory, R&D and Office work environments. At Genentech, the Ergonomics Group supports a staff of 14,000 on the South San Francisco site. She works with interdisciplinary teams, including design, process and production engineers, EHS and safety teams to integrate ergonomics into the Genentech’s continuous improvement process. She is a board Certified Professional Ergonomist with a MS in Environmental Health Sciences from the University of California, Berkeley, which included a research focus on wrist and shoulder postures during alternative keyboard use. Prior to her degree in ergonomics, Meg had over ten years of clinical experience as a Physical Therapist, specializing in treatment of work-related injuries and development of skills-based back education and training programs. She is a member of the Office Ergonomics Research Committee (OERC) and HFES.
 
Jay Kappellusch PhD
Co-director
Ergonomics Laboratory for Independent Living Environment & Occupation UWM
Dr. Kappellush is co-director of the Ergnomics Laboratory for Independent Living Environment & Occupation at the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee (UWM). Dr. Kapellusch’s primary research interests are in development of quantitative ergonomics job design algorithms that can be proactively used to design highly productive, safe jobs in manufacturing and service industries. He is working to integrate these algorithms with modern Industrial Engineering philosophies, such as Lean Manufacturing and Six Sigma, as well as traditional Industrial Engineering tools and techniques, such as methods engineering and statistical quality control, to provide industry with a comprehensive job design system. On a parallel track, Kapellusch is interested in studying the physical capabilities of older and disabled populations with the primary objective of developing simple yet effective devices and/or equipment that would enable these individuals to be more functional and productive members of society. He also works with members of the UWM Center for Ergonomics to build upon his ergonomics systems work with industry to create comprehensive job risk management software, training packages and to extend state of art consulting services/resources to industry on a “fee for service” basis.