1 / 22

Understanding and Preventing Repetitive Stress Injuries

Understanding and Preventing Repetitive Stress Injuries. Brian Rouse MSPT, OCS. Goals. Understanding normal body function Identifying how position affects function Guidelines for workspace assessment Tips/exercises to improve body function. Defining Ergonomics.

iniko
Download Presentation

Understanding and Preventing Repetitive Stress Injuries

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  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.gif

  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/ergonomics/home/advice/workspacecomfortguide/http://solutions.3m.com/wps/portal/3M/en_US/ergonomics/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/lab/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 California—Los Angeles http://ergonomics.ucla.edu/index.html • University of California—San 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/

More Related