Workstation Discomfort and Solutions
Where is your problem area?
Choose a marker to find out about risk factors and
how to minimize them
Discomfort Area: Shoulders
| Risk Factors | How to Decrease Risks |
|---|---|
| Phone use is greater than one hour per day | 1-2 hours per day:
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| Mouse position is too far from keyboard | Move mouse closer to keyboard |
| Wiggling wrist while using the mouse |
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| Using mouse solely with right hand | Use mouse with left hand |
| Arm rest is too far apart and individual leans on one rest |
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| Lifting heavy items with one arm | Use two arms or reorganize office space |
| Keyboard drawer only holds keyboard |
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| Keyboard is too far away, too high, or too low |
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| Monitor too far away and person leans forward to view screen |
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| Back rest on chair does not fit individual; low back and no shoulder support |
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| Arm rests are too high or too far apart |
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Content provided by University of Minnesota |
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Discomfort Area: Wrists
| Risk Factors | How to Decrease Risks |
|---|---|
| Mouse is positioned far away from the keyboard; the wrist is bent at an awkward position; Mouse may be too low |
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| Tight pinch grip on pen and heavy writing |
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| Keyboard is poorly placed | Align keyboard drawer at elbow height |
| Calculator is positioned too high or too far away |
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| Keyboard is too high, too low, too far away | Place keyboard near elbow height with shoulders relaxed |
| Wrist rest is too high, too low, too hard, too soft, or in the way | Remove the wrist wrest or use one that is comfortable |
| Elbows are above the keyboard height and there is a crease at the wrist |
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| Elbows are below the keyboard height |
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| Repetitive job without variety |
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Content provided by University of Minnesota |
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Discomfort Area: Neck
| Risk Factors | How to Decrease Risks |
|---|---|
| Monitor is too far away and head is tilted forward or person is nearsighted | Bring monitor closer, up to 15-25 inches away (roughly arms length away), or change vision prescription |
| Mouse is too far to one side, too high, or too far forward | Move mouse closer to keyboard height |
| Documents on desk or documents too far to one side | Place the document and the monitor at height that allows neck to be neutral (straight) |
| Individual wears bifocals and tilts head back |
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| Monitor too low, neck tilted forward | Raise monitor |
| Phone cradled between neck and shoulder | Phone use 1-2 hours per day:
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| Elbows are above the keyboard height and there is a crease at the wrist |
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Content provided by University of Minnesota |
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Discomfort Area: Eyes
| Risk Factors | How to Decrease Risks |
|---|---|
| Monitor tilted too far away | Change monitor position |
| Direct light in eyes | Reduce light, use glare screen or change monitor position |
| Low relative humidity and dry eyes |
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| Eyeglass prescription too weak or too strong | Change eyeglass prescription |
| Monitor too high |
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| Monitor off to side |
Center monitor |
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Content provided by University of Minnesota |
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Discomfort Area: Low Back
| Risk Factors | How to Decrease Risks |
|---|---|
| Chair back is down at bottom of seat; seat pan is too long |
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| Feet are dangling from chair |
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| Keyboard in poor location or too far forward | Move keyboard closer |
| Back injury or medical condition prevents sitting for long periods |
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Content provided by University of Minnesota |
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Discomfort Area: Legs
| Risk Factors | How to Decrease Risks |
|---|---|
| Chair seat is too big; individual has to sit forward or cross legs to relieve discomfort |
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| Chair seat too small; poor weight distribution |
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| Pain in buttocks - knees higher than hips (usually problem for tall people) |
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| Pain in calf or back of thigh below knee |
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| Top of leg hurts, can't cross legs | Table top too thick; purchase a thinner table |
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Content provided by University of Minnesota |
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