Publication | Closed Access
The effects of workstation changes and behavioral interventions on safe typing postures in an office
22
Citations
7
References
2007
Year
Upright PostureEngineeringSafety ScienceHealthy Work EnvironmentEducationInjury PreventionHuman FactorBehavioral Safety InterventionBehavioral InterventionsHuman FactorsOccupational ErgonomicsBehavioral SciencesAssistive TechnologyDesignWork SafetyUser ExperienceWorkstation ChangesRehabilitationOccupational SafetySafe Typing PosturesCognitive ErgonomicsLibrary Office SettingOccupational TherapyHuman-computer InteractionErgonomics
The purpose of the present study was to determine the effectiveness of an ergonomic and behavioral safety intervention for improving participants' safe typing postures in a library office setting. A single-subject multiple baseline design across five participants was employed to evaluate the effects of the four independent variables (workstation adjustment, equipment trial (rollermouse mouse alternative), peer observations, and graphic feedback). Six participant postures were observed repeatedly while participants worked at their workstations throughout the study. Each of the interventions resulted in improvements in safety for more than one posture compared to the previous phase. Results of the study indicate that a comprehensive ergonomic program that includes a workstation adjustment and a behavioral safety approach may be helpful to produce maximum improvements in employees' safe ergonomic postures.
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