SIT
Raise or lower the seat to ensure your thighs are parallel to the
floor with your feet flat on the floor or a footrest.
Adjust seat pan depth to maintain two inches of clearance
between the back of your knees and the front edge of the seat.
Adjust backrest height to comfortably fit the small of your back.
Adjust the recline tension, if necessary, to support varying degrees
of recline throughout the day. Avoid the use of recline locks.
Lean back and relax in your chair to allow the backrest to
support your upper body.
TYPE
Use an articulating keyboard support and position it 1 to 1.5
inches above your thighs. Angle the keyboard away from your
body to keep wrists straight while typing. Rest your palms—not
your wrists—on a palm support.
MOUSE
Position your mouse close to the keyboard or over the numeric
keypad to minimize reaching. Avoid anchoring your wrist on the
desk. Instead, glide the heel of your palm over the mousing
surface and use your entire arm to mouse.
VIEW
Position the monitor at least an arm’s length away with the top
line of text at or slightly below eye level. Tilt the monitor away
from you so your line of sight is perpendicular to the monitor.
ILLUMINATE
Position a task light to the side opposite your writing hand.
Shine it on paper documents but away from computer monitors
to reduce glare.
ALIGN
Align the monitor and spacebar with the midline of your body
and arrange frequently used work tools within easy reach. Prop
reference documents between your body and the monitor with
an in-line document holder.
REST
Take two or three 30- to 60-second breaks each hour to allow
your body to recover from periods of repetitive stress.
Article From HUMAN SCALE
http://www.humanscale.com
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