Shifting Paradigms: Yes or No?
- By Deborah Read
- May 01, 2008
There’s a battle going on among
professionals conducting office
ergonomic evaluations, and you
may not even be aware of it. Often, one
of the hardest things for a professional is
to change the way you do things—to
change what you recommend to your
clients. But this is exactly what we must
do when we learn about research with
practical applications.
It may make you feel as though you’ve
been wrong, even negligent, in the past.
You might worry to yourself, “Gosh, did I
make things worse for that person with
what I recommended? Should I go back
and fix it? Will I look like an idiot who
doesn’t know his/her job? Will I make my
profession of ergonomics look even more
wishy-washy than what the public already
thinks about it?”
I believe we need to set aside all of
those fears and forge ahead with professionalism.
We need to educate our clients
that we are on top of our game and that,
based on research combined with our
clinical experience, we are modifying our
technique or our recommendations. I’m
going to tell you how I have changed what
we recommend when we do office
ergonomic evaluations.
To get to these changes, I had to confront
my own learning and beliefs. I had
learned, as probably many of you had, that
a “good” ergonomic workstation included
a fully adjustable chair with arm rests, a
fully adjustable keyboard tray positioned in
negative tilt, the mouse on that tray or
attached to that tray, and a 90° elbow and
knee position.
In my own office set-up, however, I
never had a keyboard tray, and I was quite
comfortable with my arms on my desk even
when typing for several hours. So I began
to question these “good” requirements. I
pulled back to ask myself some broad-perspective
questions. Here was my thinking
that began several years ago and the conclusion
I eventually came to:
1. Why are there arm rests on office
chairs? They don’t fit most people, but it
must be because arm support is important.
They must have been invented to help
people have arm support while typing on a
keyboard on a keyboard tray.
2. But why are there keyboard trays? It
must be because we need the adjustability,
but I really think they were invented to
solve a space problem that was created by
large CRT monitors. And now that we
have flat screens that don’t take up the
entire depth of a desk . . . .
3. Why, then, do we need keyboard
trays at all? Well, I guess we don’t. We
can push back the flat screen and the keyboard
on the desktop and get great
forearm support in such a way that there
is wide distribution of forces and, therefore,
no local contact stress; in such a way
that there is no pressure or contact stress
to the wrist or palm pads; and in such a
way that there is no overloading or static
contraction of the trapeziums and sternocleidomastoid
(by having the desktop
high enough to take the full weight of the
arms and prevent slouching), to prevent
neck/shoulder discomfort.
This is what Gerr, et al. (2002) and
Rempel, et al. (2006) both concluded,
despite evaluating different configurations
and equipment: The bottom line was
forearm support significantly reduced
neck/shoulder discomfort.
As long as people aren’t dropping
their wrists to the desk surface, their
wrists are well within allowable 0-15° of
wrist extension while typing with the
muscular portion of their forearm supported
on the desk. For those who have
the deeply ingrained habit of dropping
their wrists to the desk surface, and since
research has shown negative impacts of
“wrist rests,” placing their elbows on the
wrist rest instead will change the relative
height of the keyboard on the desk top
and therefore ensure 0-15° of wrist extension
while typing (much like Rempel’s
forearm board support).
4. Now, I’m back to the first question:
Why would we need arm rests on office
chairs? I guess we don’t need them after
all! This would allow people to sit closer
to their desks and all of the equipment/
accessories atop their desks, such as
phones, 10-keys, writing areas, etc. No
more keyboard trays to push or pull or
reach and bend over or have bump into
our thighs. All I have to do is adjust the
relative heights of the person and the
desktop, which is really easy with bracketed
modular furniture or pin-height or
otherwise height-adjustable desks.
For those desks that are too high, we
can cut down the legs or raise the chair
and provide elevated foot support. Furthermore,
arm rests don’t come close
enough to the sides of many bodies (especially
females) to support the forearm, so
people end up “winging” their elbows out
to reach the arm rests, which can cause
neck/shoulder discomfort in and of itself.
So there’s yet another bonus to this whole
new configuration recommendation.
How perfect!
Individual Circumstances Still Matter
That said, there are occasions when the
type of desk requires a keyboard tray or
when a person with a neck injury really
does need arm rests on his/her chair. Many
individual circumstances require out-ofthe-
box configurations. The big change for
me was what became my primary intervention
vs. secondary and tertiary.
Most people still believe they need keyboard
trays and arm rests, and most people
responsible for ergonomic interventions
are recommending these as standard protocol
when they may be unnecessary and in
fact may cause other risk factors, such as
over-reaching to access the desktop for
making a brief notation or answering the
phone. But they keep recommending them
because that is what they are used to doing.
I will keep my eye out for new research
and will change what I recommend accordingly.
I hope you do, too!
This article originally appeared in the May 2008 issue of Occupational Health & Safety.