Ergonomic Makeover:
Fix Your Workspace in 3 Simple Steps
Give your workspace an ergonomic makeover and reap the benefits of better posture, better productivity, and less pain and discomfort at work.
A recent poll determined that 86% of employees that work at a desk job were in pain during work. However, with improving work place ergonomics, pain can be eliminated and can improve worker productivity and wellbeing. A poll among employees determined that workers would be more pleasant on the job, more productive, and less stressed if their workspace design was ergonomically correct.
What many employees and employers may not know, is that they are actually putting their bodies at risk for early onset degeneration if they don’t take action to make their workspace a safe postural environment. Your body is simply not designed to sit in the average workspace.
Are you at risk from spinal damage due to poor posture and work place ergonomics? Get checked by us now.
Fix Your Workspace in 3 Simple Steps
Sit tall and look straight ahead: By adjusting the level of your computer screen or laptop you can literally change your natural posture in an instant. The middle of your computer screen should be eye level, allowing you to look forward comfortably as you work instead of looking down. Looking down for long periods of time creates excess tension on the muscles of the neck and the shoulders. Over time, this creates a postural distortion pattern of the head, neck, and shoulders. To raise your computer monitor or laptop you can buy a lifter to adjust the height, or simply place a book underneath it.
Out with the old chair, and in with the exercise ball: Did you know that when you are in a seated position you increase the pressure in the lower back by about 1.7 times your body weight? And this is when you sit properly, if you slouch that pressure increases further. The spine is generally strong enough to tolerate the pressure of a slouched spine for about 20 minutes, before the discs start to suffer. You may notice your back becoming stiffer throughout the course of the day to compensate for this pressure. Over time this can cause serious spinal degeneration with associated symptoms such as chronic back pain, herniated spinal discs, and sciatica.
To avoid weakening your lower back at work get rid of that old office chair and replace it with a good office chair or an exercise ball. Some normal chairs can make it difficult to sit upright with a straight spine. When sitting on an exercise ball proper posture comes more naturally. Due to the design of the ball, you must engage and activate your core musculature while seated. This is highly beneficial as the core muscles support the lumbar spine.
The Keyboard Solution: Another common complaint among employees who work at a desk job is pain in their wrists and elbows, eventually leading to carpal tunnel syndrome. The solution to preventing this from happening to you is to consider the position in which your keyboard is placed. If you are bending your wrists all day and everyday, this can cause serious strain to the ligaments, joints, muscles, and nerves of the forearm and hands. To correct this problem, position your keyboard in front of you- not too far away. You want to be able to keep your elbows at a comfortable 90-degree angle. The height of the desk should be at a height where you can place your hands flat on the keyboard and type in this manner. You want to avoid bending your wrists back and typing with your forearms flexed.