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Supervisor Tips: Making Your Office "User-Friendly" for Computer Users
Fact Sheet: A
User-Friendly Workstation (pdf)
Print and share this fact sheet with office staff.
Assess Your Office:
- Do staff members in your office use a computer four hours or more
a day?
- Do employees perform continuous, intensive computer work without
taking rest breaks?
- Have personal computers or other computer equipment recently been
installed in your office with little thought given to accompanying
computer workstation furniture and accessories?
- Do you notice staff members sitting in awkward postures when using
their computers?
- Does office staff experience computer-related aches and pains or
eyestrain from computer use?
- Have there been any computer-related injuries such as tendonitis
or carpal tunnel syndrome in your office in the last year?
Suggestions for Action:
- Print "A User-Friendly
Workstation" and share copies with staff.
- Schedule a "Computer Health*Matters" workshop or send staff to this
class to empower them with the information they need to work safely.
See ICE for current
schedule. Refer to the "Healthy Office Resource
Guide" for available campus resources.
- Promote frequent short "stretch" breaks or alternative work tasks
to break up long hours of intensive keyboard work. Encourage staff
to bookmark and visit the "Take
A Stretch Break" website often. Studies have shown that brief
breaks can reduce fatigue and increase productivity among computer
users.
- Redesign jobs with repetitive tasks to promote task rotation.
- Request your department's computer workstation evaluator to perform
preventive workstation evaluations for current staff who use a computer
4 hours or more a day and for new employees when they are hired.
- Request re-evaluations if an employee reports symptoms, when new
computer equipment is installed, or when employees are relocated to
a different workstation.
- Implement changes recommended by your department's computer workstation
evaluator.
- Encourage innovation. It can lead to creative, inexpensive ways
of resolving workplace design problems. Solutions don't have to look
nice to be effective. Elevating a monitor screen on a box may be as
effective as a commercial product designed for this purpose.
- Identify workstations requiring new equipment. Develop a plan for
prioritizing and budgeting for more expensive solutions, if needed.
- Discuss your ideas and plans with your manager to win support at
higher levels. Management commitment is a key component of successful
health and safety programs on the job.
- Encourage staff to report symptoms early. Send injured employees
for medical treatment and report injuries promptly. Implement work
restrictions and workplace modifications recommended.
- Document training sessions, workstation evaluations, and improvements
you have made. Keep your department's safety committee or department
safety coordinator updated on your activities.
Action Plan
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