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Understanding and Preventing Repetitive Stress Injuries

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Title: Understanding and Preventing Repetitive Stress Injuries


1
Understanding and Preventing Repetitive Stress
Injuries
  • Brian Rouse MSPT, OCS

2
Goals
  • Understanding normal body function
  • Identifying how position affects function
  • Guidelines for workspace assessment
  • Tips/exercises to improve body function

3
Defining Ergonomics
  • Involves adapting a task to a person, not making
    the person change for the task
  • Altering the task, the environment, or both

http//www.wark.csiro.au/library/gifs/ergonomics.g
if
4
Anatomic Efficiency
  • Joints
  • Two bones meet and move against each other
  • Primary damage is from compression and friction
  • Areas of joint loaded unevenly faster damage
  • Muscles
  • Control joint movement, hold body in place
  • Work to produce forces or stabilize against
    gravity
  • If too much work is performed muscle fails
  • Focus of ergonomics is DOING LESS WORK

5
Fighting Gravity
http//www.posturepal.com/assets/images/sci2.jpg
6
Consequences of Poor Posture
  • Cumulative Trauma/Repetitive Stress
  • Itis means inflamed/overstressed
  • Tendonitis, bursitis, synovitis, arthritis
  • Tissues that work too hard will complain
  • Permanent Body Changes
  • Arthritis cartilage damage does not regenerate
  • Disc degeneration does not reverse
  • Nerve compression can block signals
  • Carpal tunnel, pinched nerve, sciatica

7
Ergonomics Made Simple
  • Use body positions requiring less work
  • Muscles sustain less damage from overworking
  • Use other objects to hold body in place
  • A muscle at rest cannot be overworked
  • The Easy Way is the Best Way

8
Challenges in Ergonomics
  • Designing for Average
  • Lack of variance in work tasks
  • Time constraints for job completion
  • Costs of modifying environment

9
http//solutions.3m.com/wps/portal/3M/en_US/ergono
mics/home/advice/workspacecomfortguide/
10
Guidelines Head/Neck
  • Monitor positioned 20-30 from eyes
  • Use arms length as a guide
  • Top of monitor should be at/slightly lower than
    eye level
  • Use document holders to read while typing
  • Head should be centered over shoulders
  • Use turtle method to draw head back

11
Shoulders/Arms
  • Shoulders/upper arms perpendicular to floor
  • Elbows close to sides/torso, at 90 degrees
  • Forearms on armrests, allowing shoulders to drop
  • Do not rest on hard/sharp armrest edges

12
Keyboard
  • Keyboard trays for height/proximity
  • Wrist needs to be neutral, not bent back
  • Wrist rests pad hard desktop, hold wrist up
  • Use only when not typing or mousing
  • Float hands over keyboard while typing
  • Mouse next to keyboard, easy to reach
  • Move mouse with elbow/forearm, not wrist

13
Chair Adjustment
  • Chair height level
  • Hips/trunk at 90 degree angle or slightly more
  • Feet flat on floor
  • Can use foot stool if needed
  • Thighs should fit under desk
  • Or keyboard tray if needed
  • Seat pan should be 1-2 wider than hips on either
    side

14
Chair Adjustment
  • Backrest
  • Position lumbar support in natural curve of back
  • If insufficient, add towel roll/etc. behind curve
  • Shoulder blades able to rest against chair back
  • Should allow user to tilt back 15 degrees

15
Common Mistakes
  • Head position too far forward
  • Monitor set at diagonal to worker
  • Forearms not on armrests
  • Shoulder blades off of backrest
  • Lumbar curve in chair not flush with back
  • Monitor set too low
  • Feet not flat on floor/stool

16
Considerations for Standing Tasks
  • Alter height of workstation or user
  • Have footrest to allow weight shift of legs
  • Organize workstation to allow controls/tools to
    be in close proximity
  • Have a chair in proximity, using for tasks that
    can be seated or just rests
  • Use proper footwear and anti-fatigue mats

17
Standing Workstations
  • Precision tasks (writing) 5 cm above elbow
    height
  • Light tasks (assembly) 5-10 cm below elbow
    height
  • Heavy tasks (downward force) 20-40 cm below
    elbow height

Canadian Centre for Occupational Health and
Safety www.ccohs.ca.oshanswers/ergonomics/
18
Task Modification
http//www.uhs.berkeley.edu/facstaff/ergonomics/la
b/tools.shtml
  • 20-20-20 rule
  • 20 minutes of work
  • 20 second rest (bare minimum)
  • Look away from screen
  • Adjust schedule as able to break up work

19
Desk Stretching
  • Longer holds are better, try for up to 30 seconds
    when possible
  • Perform before/after work, during breaks
  • Order does not matter, just frequency (1 hours)

20
Warning Signs/Symptoms
  • Pain--severe intensity or long duration (2-3
    days)
  • Changes in sensation
  • Numbness, tingling, burning
  • Unexplained weakness/fatigue
  • Difficulty with coordination/clumsiness
  • Abnormal swelling/redness

21
Other Considerations
  • Strengthening postural muscles with exercise
    (yoga, strength training, etc)
  • Sleep and proper diet aid in prevention of injury
    and healing
  • Health problems (hypertension, diabetes) can
    increase risk of injury development

22
Resources
  • University of CaliforniaLos Angeles
  • http//ergonomics.ucla.edu/index.html
  • University of CaliforniaSan Diego
  • http//blink.ucsd.edu/Blink/External/Topics/Policy
    /0,1162,4008,00.html
  • Canadian Centre for Occupational Health and
    Safety
  • http//ccohs.ca/oshanswers/ergonomics/
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