Is your laptop damaging your health?

Increased use of laptops is causing a rise of computer-related injuries, which can be caused by anything from bad posture from the strain of lugging them around.

When Ram Viswanadha began using a laptop at work, he decided to shelve his clunky old desktop PC for good. The notebook's size, speed and memory blew the older computer away.

What the 30-year-old Silicon Valley software engineer didn't bargain for was a severe case of repetitive strain injury ââ,¬" and a three-month disability leave ââ,¬" from hunching over his laptop day in and day out for four years.

Viswanadha's situation is a worst-case scenario in workplace ergonomics, but stories like his are becoming more common, according to doctors and ergonomic experts across the country. As people ditch desktop computers to work full time on laptops, doctors expect to see a lot more pains, strains and injuries among white collar workers.

"When you look at the design, laptops were never (meant) as a replacement for a desktop computer," says Alan Hedge, director of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Laboratory at Cornell University. "The idea was portability for occasional use. It was never intended to be a machine you would work at for eight hours a day, 52 weeks a year."

In the US, more than 9,200 non-government workers reported missing a day or more of work because of typing and keyboarding-related injuries in 2003, according to figures from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics. Ninety-two percent of those cases were associated with worker motion or position, the bureau says. More than a third of those workers missed over a month of work because of their injuries.

For notebook computer use, such statistical information on injuries is scarce, but doctors report a steady stream of new patients who've overdone it on the machines. That's not surprising given the boom in laptop sales. Nearly 49 million notebooks were sold in 2004 worldwide, almost double the number sold in 2000, according to market researcher IDC. The devices account for more than a quarter of the computer market, and are set to surpass desktop sales in the US by 2008, IDC says.

The main problem with laptops is that the screen and keyboard are so close together. Without the aid of peripherals, laptop users have two choices, neither of which would win them any points for posture. They can cramp their neck down to view the monitor or they can elevate the machine to eye level, which can wreak havoc on shoulders and arms.

And the wrists lose regardless, because the keyboard is so small, leading to awkward hand positioning.

"These are all recipes for disaster for your body, and your musculoskeletal system especially," says Nicholas DiNubile, an orthopaedic surgeon in Havertown, Pennsylvania, a Philadelphia suburb.

Laptops can cause other physical woes. People have been burned by the heat the machines generate. The temperature issue can also cause fertility problems in men who place the machines on their laps for prolonged periods. Frequent travellers can put strain on backs, hands and shoulders by lugging a laptop around.

For Viswanadha, neck strain was the root of injury. His doctors says spending so much time on the laptop had shortened his neck muscles, putting pressure on his spine and compressing the nerves that run to his hands. Eventually his hands began feeling numb and painful and he was diagnosed with repetitive strain injury ââ,¬" a family of ailments caused by repetitive motion and poor posture.

But the bad news went beyond his body.

"For a couple of months, I didn't know what I was going to do; I have a single-income family," he says. "I kind of went into a depression state."

Viswanadha is back at work now, however, and learning to cope with his injury, but he wishes he had taken precautions much earlier.

An ounce of prevention...
Many laptop-related injuries can be avoided. The use of peripherals such as docking stations, separate keyboards and mice is probably the easiest way to avoid neck and shoulder trouble. These add-ons let users adjust monitors to eye level while keeping arms and shoulders in a natural position. Several companies offer laptop stands that prop machines up to desired height.

The ideal height of the monitor is about 20 degrees below horizontal eye level, or 8 inches below eye level at a 20 inch viewing distance, says Tom Albin of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society.

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