Autonomous Smart Office Chair

Workplace Ergonomics: What You Need to Know about Office Chairs

May 24, 2019
Office furniture should support the body in a healthy position.

Most employees who feel at ease at their workplaces perform their tasks with a positive attitude and motivation.

Satisfied teams are characterized by a higher quality of work and achieve their objectives faster and more effectively. Ergonomically-designed office equipment and optimized working processes decisively contribute to well-being in everyday working life.

Ergonomics at the workplace, however, also make sense from an entrepreneurial point of view; they reduce musculoskeletal diseases in employees and this means fewer lost days and higher productivity.

Ergonomic Chairs and Business Furniture

In modern society people mostly live a sedentary lifestyle. Our bodies, however, are not designed to function for sitting permanently. A passive seated posture weakens the body’s supporting muscles and vertebral disks are exposed to an unbalanced load. This leads to tensions, pain, inflammation and limited mobility. Furthermore, the pressure exerted on the nerves negatively impacts digestion, respiration and concentration. As a result – people’s well-being decreases and their ability to perform drops.

“This is why we need furniture that supports the body in its healthy position with the highest degree of mobility possible,” says Malte Lenkeit, ergonomics consultant at the German office furniture manufacturer Dauphin. “Office chairs should keep the vertebral column in its natural double-S shape and support an upright position – by an automatic inclination of the upper part of the chair and a permanent counter pressure produced by the backrest in the process.”

According to studies by the Federal Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (BAuA) – included in its publication “Arbeitswelt im Wandel” (Working World undergoing Change), issue 2018 – back problems continue to be among the most frequent symptoms.

In the workforce survey significantly more women (63.5 %) than men (39.7 %) stated that they suffered from neck and shoulder pain. Lower back pain was reported by 51.4 % of women and 44 % of men. 

Avoiding Safety Risks

While office jobs are associated with a lot of sitting, many workers on assembly lines or in shipping departments have to stand more than seven hours a day. This adds up to over 1,800 hours a year. Hard floors increase the physical stress by one-sided strains which, in turn, increase pressure on joints and cause long-term illness.

Discussions about the future of work and workplace 4.0 center around creating optimum conditions for all, for instance for mobile standing. Here special floor mats can have a supportive effect.

The current trends will be presented at A+A 2019, International Trade Fair with Congress for Safety, Security and Health at Work in Düsseldorf, Germany.

“Mats with high damping properties save the joints while reducing noise levels. They are in high demand in logistics center or in dry areas of industrial production,” explains Martina Baumgärtner, head of the German service office of Ergomat, a manufacturer of products for various work areas and with different functionalities.

Some mats come with a surface designed to catch oil, chemicals, chips or other dirt particles at industrial workplaces to prevent workers from slipping. Other products rest on little webs or suction cups. Even when liquids are spilled these ensure secure footing since the liquids can drain through the raised design.

Mats with colored coatings mark walking areas or danger zones in manufacturing areas or halls. Silver-coated products can even address the issue of maximizing brightness in windowless production areas and halls as they reflect three times more light than dark mats.

The Future belongs to Collaborating Robots

Industrial workplaces increasingly rely on robots as colleagues, in order to spare humans straining jobs such as lifting heavy loads or working overhead. In the automation industry the future belongs to collaborating robots as the missing link between a purely human workplace and fully automated production.

“There is particular importance attached to performance and force monitoring,” says Dr. Matthias Umbreit, head of the Machines, Robotics and Wood Working Department at the Wood and Metal Trade Association. “Robots that are specifically designed for human-robot collaboration (HRC) detect the contacts between a robot or tool and a person and can therefore switch off the robot before injuries occur.”

So far HRC systems have made inroads in the automotive industries and OEMs, precision mechanics and electrotechnical production or in the chemical and plastics industry.

Planning for Healthy Workplaces

Since human beings – by nature – do not perform consistently over hours, it makes sense to support them ergonomically. If workplaces are planned and designed accordingly, staff performance can be increased. 

One way of establishing the need for ergonomic improvements is EAWS, the Ergonomic Assessment Worksheet. It was developed by the German MTM-Vereinigung e.V. and works like this: during an on-site inspection, experts analyze the workflow at a given workplace. This involves capturing the static body postures and forces impacting the whole body, upper body or fingers. The necessity for ergonomic improvements is assessed by means of a risk score.

“The modular MTM-HWD system helps us to describe workflows. HWD is the acronym for Human Work Design,” says Dr. Thomas Finsterbusch, head of the MTM Academy.

With the help of pictograms the movement of hands and arms as well as eyes are described. This way all processes can be assessed in view of their ergonomic strain – when workers have to strongly twist their joints.

For motion capture, a person’s individual extremities and trunk are equipped with sensors to supply a host of data. Evaluating the captured data experts can see which motions increase or decrease risks. These are then directly incorporated into the design process of healthier workplaces.

Open Office-Scapes – New Requirements

Nowadays, run-of-the-mill offices are a thing of the past. The “Deutsches Netzwerk Büro” (German Network Office), a society embedded in the INQA – New Quality of Work Initiative of the Federal Ministry of Labor, will address the topic of open-plan office-scapes “Offene Bürolandschaften”. These are popular in the start-up community or creative industries. 

“Employees here have a choice of workstations for different tasks that either require high concentration or personal exchange. This is why they only work at the same workstation temporarily – which requires designs adapted to these needs,” says David Wiechmann, chairman of “Deutsches Netzwerk Büro”.

Therefore, desks shared by several members of staff should be height adjustable and equipped with a display with precise height adjustment. Chairs would ideally have automatic weight recognition. Everything should be intuitive and adjustable if possible.

Important pointers – from the initial idea for sustainable office concepts to the design of the working environment – can be found in the publication “Büroraumplanung – Hilfen für das systematische Planen und Gestalten von Büros” (Office Planning – Aids for Systematically Planning and Designing Offices) of the German Statutory Accident Insurance DGUV. 

Indoor Climate – a Factor of Growing Importance

Indoor climate is gaining increasing importance for health and safety at work. “A relative air humidity of 40% to 50% is ideal,” says Dominic Giesel, marketing director at Condair Systems and adds: “A relative air humidity of below 40% keeps viruses active for hours and spreads them through the entire building – the danger of infections rises.” In winter the relative air humidity often goes down to as little as 10% in many offices. Once the air is too dry, our mucous membranes dry out, our eyes start burning and our voice fails us.

Direct room humidification is possible in all rooms today – in new and old buildings, in big and small rooms. Here sanitized water is sprayed as a visible mist into the room via hand-sized nozzles connected to the water supply. This procedure is suited to large rooms such as open-space offices used by insurance companies or call centers.

Here the need for humidity is high since employees talk a lot and their vocal apparatus requires moisture. The situation is similar in jobs where people spend long periods in front of monitors. Dry air dries up the tear ducts and increases the risk of conjunctivitis. According to studies carried out by Barmer Ersatzkasse, about  eight million people suffer from this clinical pattern called “office-eye-syndrome”.

A study conducted by the Fraunhofer Institute “Luftfeuchtigkeit am Büroarbeitsplatz” (Air Humidity at the Office Workplace) dating back to  2014 shows that the humidification of indoor air by means of very fine aerosols that are visible and also perceivable in the vicinity of the humidifiers, are perceived as positive. 38.5% of the people polled welcomed the method and rated the indoor climate as refreshing and performance-enhancing. In industrial sectors optimal air humidity helps ensure quality. It contributes to avoiding electrostatic charging – which is of major importance in the electronics industry. “There are no legal provisions governing air humidity. But the rising significance of corporate health management moves the importance of air humidification more and more center stage,” explains Giesel.  

Author Info: Gabriele Brähler is a freelance journalist in Berlin, Germany.

About the Author

Gabriele Brähler

Gabriele Brähler is a freelance journalist based in Berlin, Germany.

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