| Literature DB >> 30169988 |
Roman Peter Kuster1,2, Christoph Michael Bauer3, Lukas Gossweiler1, Daniel Baumgartner1.
Abstract
Ergonomics science recommends office chairs that promote active sitting to reduce sitting related complaints. Since current office chairs do not fulfill this recommendation, a new chair was developed by inverting an existing dynamic chair principle. This study compares active sitting on the inverted chair during a simulated computer-based office task to two existing dynamic office chairs (n = 8). Upper body stability was analysed using Friedman ANOVA (p = .01). In addition, participants completed a questionnaire to rate their comfort and activity after half a working day. The inverted chair allowed the participants to perform a substantial range of lateral spine flexion (11.5°) with the most stable upper body posture (≤11 mm, ≤2°, p ≤ .01). The results of this study suggest that the inverted chair supports active sitting with backrest support during computer-based office work. However, according to comfort and activity ratings, results should be verified in a future field study with 24 participants. Practitioner Summary: This experimental laboratory study analyses the feasibility of active sitting with a backrest support during common office work on a new type of dynamic office chair. The results demonstrate that active sitting with a backrest support is feasible on the new but limited on existing chairs.Entities:
Keywords: Active sitting; back pain; ergonomic office chair; motion axis; office ergonomics
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30169988 DOI: 10.1080/00140139.2018.1517899
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ergonomics ISSN: 0014-0139 Impact factor: 2.778