Rank: Forum user
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Hi Guys.
Please help. I have a DSE user who is complaining of Tendonitis in her shoulder. Looking at her set up, everything looks fine (chair at right height, screen in front of her/correct height etc). I only found out about the Tendonitis because she had written it on her DSE assessment. Now I need to come up with a solution.
Can anyone suggest where I should go next? I plan to 'google' this during today, but wondered if anyone else has had this and how did they solve it. Also, is there a definitive website that I can look at.
Thanks if anyone can help.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Rank: Guest
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It might be prudent to ask her to seek medical advice from her G.P. Or pay for an occupational health expert to give you more advice
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Rank: Forum user
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contact a company called Posture, i used to work for them
they send out specialist dse risk assessors and also make and sell specialist DSE equipment such as headphones, made to measure chairs, laptop and desk risers etc
in short anything to do with DSE this company can source - useful one to know
they are expensive! but give good results - hope this helps
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Rank: Super forum user
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Ivor, you only need a solution if there is a problem. Speak to your colleague.
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Rank: Super forum user
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How certain are you that the true cause is her workstation or work? People jump to lots of conclusions, often without appropriate medical knowledge. I would recommend, as has someone already, that proper medical advice is sought first before any further action is taken. Otherwise you might find that having invested time and money you end up with no resolution, as the real cause is not what you have been attempting to deal with.
Chris
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Rank: Forum user
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Thanks guys for all the responses so far. Chris. I think you hit the nail on the head. I can't be sure that this is work related. In the first instance I will suggest she contacts her GP and see what they say before I go down the specialist help route.
David, I spoke to her and she seemed very 'non plus' about this stating she has this and there's nothing anyone can do! I'm just looking for some advice I can send to her and her line manager.
thanks for the links Ian. I'll have a read through them now.
Regards
Ivor
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Rank: Forum user
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Might consider getting her to trial a trackball mouse. Relatively inexpensive piece of kit which could help considerably.
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Rank: Super forum user
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No point in going off half-cocked on this, you need a competent diagnosis and opinion from a qualified practitioner. The employee may be self-diagnosing incorrectly.
My own thought for a chronic shoulder issue would be to dispense with any sort of pointing device and focus on using keyboard shortcuts. A shift from keyboard to mouse can be avoided altogether.
A more in depth observation and assessment of the tasks (As opposed to looking at only the hardware) will identify other aspects of the task potentially requiring attention, e.g. cradling telephone handset between shoulder and ear, poor workstation layout etc.
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Rank: Forum user
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Could it be something she does out of work - we had a DSE user who complained in a similar way and it turned out she was some sort of x-box console champion!!!
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