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India-Infotech.com : Articles
  Safe Computing Tips

 

    Millions of people around the world, now use computers as their primary business tool. In the last decade or so the number of hours people use computers has increased tremendously. With this increase in use of computers, associated problems has also increased. Computer related health problems are caused by improper use and lack of knowledge about safe computing techniques.

    Keyboard & Mouse

    Improper use of keyboard and mouse can cause ailments generally referred to as repetitive stress injuries (RSI), repetitive motion injuries or repetitive strain injuries - involve wrists, arms, neck, back or shoulders.

    Symptoms of computer related repetitive-motion injury can be mild, such as stiffness and minor pain, sometimes your symptoms may not occur until several hours or even days after the activity which causes them.

    Proper typing is one of the best ways to prevent RSI. The most common mistakes people make is to contort their hands to perform key combinations, such as a shifted letter. Ctrl and Alt keys present the same problem. Typing key combinations by contorting one hand often leads to numbness, tingling, or loss of feeling in the little finger. Instead, you should use one hand to hit the letter key, and the index finger of the opposite hand to hit the Shift, Ctrl or Alt key.

    Twisting your hands puts strain on them. Resting on a wrist rest, the table, or arm rests while typing forces you to twist your hand to reach some keys. Instead, it is better to keep your hands moving freely above the keyboard, letting the strong muscles of your arms move your hands. Rest your wrists on a wrist rest only when you are NOT typing. Wrist rests are designed to support the heel of your hand, not for resting your wrists. Place wrist rests so that the top is level with the top of your keyboard's space bar.

    Make sure you sit centered over the part of the keyboard you use the most. Don't sit centered over the number pad if you never use it.

    There are a number of "ergonomic" keyboards including one from Microsoft. While these keyboards can help reduce wrist or hand strain in some individuals, the key to healthy hands has more to do with how you work and how often you take breaks rather than what type of keyboard you use.

    Stretching your arm to reach out to the mouse can cause mouse "shoulder" and "mouse arm". The mouse should be placed near the keyboard so that it is easy to use without stretching the arm too far away from the body.

    Monitors

    Looking at the monitor for extended periods can cause eyestrain. Eyestrain means different things to different people. It may be experienced as burning, tightness, sharp pains, dull pains, watering, blurring, double vision, headaches, and other sensations, depending on the person.

    The major factors affecting the Eye of a computer user are, glare, luminance, distance between eye and screen, readability of the screen and document, user's vison and his/her corrective lenses.

    Keep the monitor as far away as you can read comfortably. Conventional wisdom for monitor height is that the top of the screen should be about at eye height. This is fine for some people, wrong for many. The current recommendation is that eye height is the highest a monitor should be, not the best height. Many people find a low monitor to be more comfortable for the eyes and neck.

    Proper lighting for your work area is important. While you want to be sure you can see your work, you also want to avoid looking directly at a light source or having glare reflected off your screen.

    Lighting should be indirect and even. Don't aim a light at your reference documents, and be sure you're not facing either a light or a window.

    If possible, place your monitor at a 90-degree angle to windows and other direct sources of light. A tiltable monitor stand will enable you to adjust to different lights.

    Keep your monitor screen clean, wipe it with a slightly wet lint free cloth every day before you start work.

    Set the brightness of your monitor at about the same level as that of objects in your field of vision, such as the wall in front of you. And keep reference documents at about the same distance away from you as the screen. For comfortable viewing

    The brightness and contrast control of the monitor should be set properly for comfortable viewing. Turn the brightness to minimum, then set the contrast to a level comfortable for your viewing.

    Natural mechanism of blinking gives our eyes micro rest. Many people when they view the computer monitor, their eye blinking rate goes down drastically, with little effort this can be corrected. For a few days consciously try to blink at the normal rate, if practiced for a week or two you can regain your natural blinking rate when using computer, this can reduce the eye strain to a good extend.

    Seating

    A well-designed chair will favorably affect posture, circulation and the amount of strain on the spine. The chair should allow you to place your feet firmly on the floor or a foot rest, with your hips slightly flexed and your knees at a 60-90 degree angle. The seat should be comfortably wide, and the backrest 6 to 9 inches high and 12 inches or more wide in the lumbar region.

    Most of the chairs used by computer users has adjustments to make it comfortable to sit on, but few people bother to adjust it. Spending a little time to learn how to adjust the chair and set it correctly can go a long way in preventing back pain.

    Conventional wisdom prescribes an upright posture, with the hips at 90 degrees. However, a great deal of recent research supports the idea of a much wider hip angle -- with 130 degrees or so as an "optimum" angle. The reason? When the hips are straightened, the vertebrae of the lower spine are aligned with each other in a way that reduces and evens out pressure on the intervertebral discs. Further, sitting upright is less desirable than reclining. When reclining, the lower back muscles work less and the spine supports less weight, since body weight is held up by the chair's backrest.

    Take a break!

    Conventional practice recommends rest breaks about fifteen minutes long, every two hours or so. This is insufficient for work such as typing. Research supports the idea of very short breaks done very frequently - for example, 30-second breaks every ten minutes or so. Taking a break can be as simple as taking your hands off the keyboard and letting your arms droop at your sides. These should happen in addition to the normal fifteen-minute coffee breaks, when you should get up from your chair and do a few exercise to loosen your neck and shoulder muscles.

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