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Timothy F. Morse, Ph.D., C.P.E.

Associate Professor
Certified Professional Ergonomist
ErgoCenter and Occupational and Environmental Health Center

Education

1973 B.A., Psychology, University of Connecticut
1978 M.A., Sociology, University of Connecticut
1987 Ph.D., Social Science & Health, University of Connecticut

Brief Chronology of Professional Career

Tim Morse, Ph.D. coordinates training programs for workers, companies, and unions in ergonomics and occupational health and safety. He has over 20 years of worker education experience, beginning with his role as Associate Director of one of the original OSHA-funded New Directions Programs in Worker Education at the University of Connecticut Health Center from 1978-1984.

He was Educational Coordinator for the Division of Worker Education of the Connecticut Workers' Compensation Commission, as well as a Senior Research Analyst in the Statistical Division. He develops an annual report on Occupational Disease for the Connecticut Workers' Compensation Commission as part of the occupational disease surveillance system.

Dr. Morse has directed and conducted hundreds of worker training programs and conferences on virtually every aspect of occupational health and safety. These include programs and training materials on ergonomics in the office, health care, and manufacturing settings, setting up occupational safety and health programs and committees, hazard communication, bloodborne pathogens, TB, solvents, cutting oils, noise, OSHA standards and OSHA procedures, use of the internet for occupational health, indoor air quality, fibrous glass, confined space, and worker epidemiology.

He is currently co-Principal Investigator and study manager on an international NIOSH-funded grant studying the health effects of vibration from tools. Dr. Morse is a co-investigator on a new grant from the federal Agency on Health Care Quality that is analyzing organizational characteristics which impact worker health and safety, with subsequent impact on medical errors. He was co-Principal Investigator on a NIOSH-funded grant on Work-related Musculoskeletal Disorders (MSD).

He has been appointed to a NIOSH expert panel on the ergonomics of hand tools. He is currently engaged in research on MSD among musicians, and the role of unions in the reporting of MSD.

Responsibilities at the UConn Health Center

Research, teaching in the Graduate Program in Public Health and medical school, and community health education on occupational health and ergonomics. Dr. Morse is the chair of the Master of Public Health Admissions Committee.

Teaching

Dr. Morse teaches Occupational Health in the MPH Program.

Research Interests

Social and economic costs of work-related musculoskeletal disorders, health effects of vibration, ergonomics of hand tools, epidemiology of occupational diseases, and training methods in health and safety.

Recent Grants

Organizations, Work Environment, and Quality of Care, Warren PI, Morse co-investigator (20%), Agency on Healthcare Research and Quality (R01). Study of relationship of social organization, occupational health, and medical errors. 2001-2004.

Exposure Response Relationship in Hand Arm Vibration, NIOSH R01, (Cherniack PI, Morse co-PI and Study Manager). Epidemiological study of the musculoskeletal effects of exposure to vibration in 4 cohorts (Electric Boat and Dental Hygienists (CT), Volvo (Sweden), and forestry workers (Finland)), 2000-2005.

Occupational Disease Surveillance, Connecticut Workers' Compensation Commission, Morse PI. Epidemiological analysis of occupational disease data for Connecticut, coordination with CT Depts. Of Labor and Public Health, and training of medical professionals in reporting of occupational diseases. 1993-2004.

Curriculum Vitae

Selected Publications

Morse TF, Dillon C , Warren N , Levenstein C , and Warren A. The Economic and Social Consequences of Work-Related Musculoskeletal Disorders, International Journal of Occupational and Environmental Health, 4:4, Oct-Dec 1998, 209-216.

Morse, T, Dillon C, Kenta-Bibi E, Weber J, Diva U, Warren N, and Grey M. Trends in Work-Related Musculoskeletal Disorder Reports by Year, Type and Industrial Sector: A Capture-Recapture Analysis, American Journal of Industrial Medicine, 48:1, July, 2005, 40-49.

Morse, T, Meyer J, St. Louis T, and Storey, E. Occupational Disease in Connecticut: 2002, Connecticut Medicine, 69:6, 2005, 329-334.

Sanders, M and Morse, T. The Ergonomics of Caring for Children: An Exploratory Study, American Journal of Occupational Therapy, 59:3, May/June 2005.

Cherniack M, Morse TF, Brammer AJ, Lundstrom R, Meyer J, Nilsson T, Peterson D, Toppila E, Warren N, Fu R, Bruneau H, Croteau M. Vibration Exposure and Disease in a Shipyard: A 13-year revisit, American Journal of Industrial Medicine, 45, 2004, 500-512.

Morse TF, Dillon C, Weber J, Warren N, Bruneau H, and Fu R, The Prevalence & Reporting of Occupational Illness by Company Size: Population Trends & Regulatory Implications, American Journal of Industrial Medicine, 45:4, 2004, 361–370.

Morse TF, Michalak-Turcotte C, Atwood-Sanders M, Warren N, Peterson DR, Bruneau H, and Cherniack M, A Pilot Study of Hand and Arm Musculoskeletal Disorders in Dental Hygiene Students, Journal of Dental Hygiene, 77:3, Summer, 2003.

TF Morse, L Punnett, N Warren, C Dillon, and A Warren, The Relationship of Unions to Prevalence and Claim Filing for Work-related Upper-extremity Musculoskeletal Disorders, American Journal of Industrial Medicine, 44:1, 2003, 83-93. [PDF; 232 KB]

N Warren, C Dillon, TF Morse, A Warren, C Hall, The Connecticut Upper Extremity Disorder Surveillance Project (CUSP) : Biomechanical, Psychosocial and Organizational Risk Factors for WRMSD; Population-Based Estimates, Journal of Occupational Health Psychology, 5:1, January 2000.

K Cooper-Arnold, T Morse, M Hodgson, C Pettigrew, R Wallace, J Clive, and J Gasecki, Occupational Tuberculosis Among Deputy Sheriffs: A Risk Model Of Transmission, Applied Industrial Hygiene, 14:11, 1999.

T Morse, N Warren, M Cherniack, F Fletcher, D Peterson, The Use of Ergonomic Data Sheets for Hazard Communication of Work-Related Musculoskeletal Disorders, Applied Ergonomics, Applied Occupational and Environmental Hygiene, July, 2001.

T Morse, Surveillance and the Problems of Assessing Office Related Injury, in Occupational Medicine: State of the Art Reviews, Office Ergonomics, M Cherniack, ed., 14:1, Jan-Mar 1999, 73-80.

T Morse and E Storey, Fatalities from Occupational Disease in Connecticut, Connecticut Medicine, 63:8, Aug 1999.

T Morse, J Ro, M Cherniack, and SR Pelletier, A Pilot Population Study of Musculoskeletal Disorders in Musicians, Medical Problems of Performing Artists, Medical Problems of Performing Artists, 15:2, June, 2000, 81-85.

T Morse, C Dillon, N Warren, C Hall, and D Hovey, Capture-Recapture Estimation of Unreported Work-Related Musculoskeletal Disorders in Connecticut, American Journal of Industrial Medicine, 39: 636-642, 2001. [PDF Pre-print; 53KB]

T Morse, C Dillon, N Warren, Reporting of Work-Related Musculoskeletal Disorder (MSD) to Workers' Compensation, New Solutions: A Journal of Environmental and Occupational Health Policy 10:3, 2000, 281-292.

T Morse and E Storey, Occupational Disease in Connecticut, 2000, Connecticut Medicine 64:12, December, 2000, 715-720.

Reports & Miscellaneous Materials

The following reports are available in Adobe® Reader® PDF format. You will need the free Adobe® Reader® Program to view or print these files.

Occupational Disease Report

Other Materials

 

Contact Information

Division of Occupational and Environmental Medicine
University of Connecticut Health Center
263 Farmington Avenue, MC 6210
Farmington, CT 06030-6210

Phone: (860) 679-4720
Fax: (860) 679-1349
Email: tmorse@nso.uchc.edu

Tim Morse, Ph.D.
     
MEDICAL SCHOOL     UCONN HEALTH CENTER    GRADUATE SCHOOL Dept. of Community Medicine
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