| Literature DB >> 22889123 |
Sjan-Mari van Niekerk1, Quinette Abigail Louw, Susan Hillier.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Prolonged sitting has been associated with musculoskeletal dysfunction. For desk workers, workstation modifications frequently address the work surface and chair. Chairs which can prevent abnormal strain of the neuromuscular system may aid in preventing musculo-skeletal pain and discomfort. Anecdotally, adjustability of the seat height and the seat pan depth to match the anthropometrics of the user is the most commonly recommended intervention. Within the constraints of the current economic climate, employers demand evidence for the benefits attributed to an investment in altering workstations, however this evidence-base is currently unclear both in terms of the strength of the evidence and the nature of the chair features. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the evidence for the effectiveness of chair interventions in reducing workplace musculoskeletal symptoms.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22889123 PMCID: PMC3552974 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2474-13-145
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Figure 1Selection of studies: summary of studies in order of level of evidence, with extracted data.
Figure 2Methodological quality summary: review authors' judgements about each methodological quality item for each included study (blank spaces or ‘?’ denote criterion not able to be determined or unclear).
Selected studies: summary of studies in order of level of evidence, with extracted data
| Wang et al. 2008
[ | USA | RCT | 293 (subset of operators with Rempel 2007 with lower p) Group n= (111;84;98) | Sewing machine operators with back /hip pain | Gp 1: control | Pre and post monthly for 4/12: Pain symptoms- intensity (1-5) and frequency | Mean pain Improv’t gp 2 vs 1: 0.25(95%CI: 0.16, 0.34);GP3 vs 1: 0.43 (0.34-0.51) per month. | Adjustable, swivelling chairs offer advantage (reduction in LB/Hip pain) for workers in seated/UL occupations; flat pan superior to curved? | Obtain means and sd for pain scores for each group (presented graphically in Fig 5A) at 4/12f/u |
| Gp2: curved pan chair | |||||||||
| Gp 3: flat seat pan chair (all received misc items, chairs hgt adjustable) | |||||||||
| Remple et al. 2008
[ | USA | RCT | 277 (subset with upper p) Group n pain (105;72;100) | Sewing machine operators with neck/ shoulder pain | Gp 1: control Gp2: curved pan chair Gp 3: flat seat pan chair (all received miscel items; intervention chairs hgt adjustable) | Pre and post monthly for 4/12: Pain symptoms- intensity (1-5) and frequency | Mean pain Improv’t gp 2 vs 1: 0.34 (95% CI: 0.28, 0.41); GP3 vs 1: 0.14 (.07-.022) per month. | Adjustable, swivelling chairs offer advantage (reduction in Cx/shoulder pain) for workers in seated/ UL occupations; curved pan superior to flat? | Obtain means and sd for pain scores for each group (presented graphically in Fig 5A) at 4/12f/u |
| Amick et al. 2003
[ | USA | RCT (assigned according to office location) | 192(87;52;S3) | Office workers (>4hrs per day at computer;>6 hrs per day sitting) | Gp1: adjustable chair + training | Pre (2xmonthly) and post intervention (3x over 1 year). Musculo- skeletal symptoms-1. Growth over workday 2. Average pain over workday | Symptom growth over workday: Gp 1<gp2/3 at 12/12f/u (p=0.012). Ave pain levels: Reduced for both Gp 1+2 compared to Gp3 | Highly adjustable chairs plus training resulted in less end of day pain and reduced average pain (largest reduction in neck/shoulder, followed by upper and lower back) | Cant separate chair as sole intervention but clear that chair + info is superior to info alone or nothing. |
| Gp2: training only | |||||||||
| Gp3: no intervention | |||||||||
| Herbert et al. 2001 [20 | USA | Pre and post test | 36 | Garment workers (“spooling” task), female | Adjustable chairs and training in their use | MS symptom survey prior to and 6/12 after introduction. Joint position in sitting via video (subgroup only). Upper limbs only. | Baseline pain report89% of group; post 63.9% (p=0.007); Reduction in severity at 10/11 anatomic sites after intervention. Only modest declines in awkward posture (small n) | Reduction in people with pain and reduction in severity overall at upper limb anatomical sites. Inconclusive posture change findings. | |
| Gadge et al. 2007
[ | Australia | Sungle case, multiple baseline (ABAB) | 4 | University students (sitting “most of the time”) | Standard office chair (adjustable) vs “saddle” seat | (dis) Comfort (VAS); Production (typing task speed and accuracy); Posture (videotape) Multiple measures across 4 phases. | Discomfort in lower back increased over time in both chairs but less so in the saddle; discomfort was significantly worse in lower limbs in saddle chair; Productivity no change; Greater trunk to thigh angles in saddle. | Some benefits for lower back discomfort and posture in saddle but also issues (lower limb discomfort). |