T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1805.1 | "New York Times" photocopied articles. Mar. 3-4, 1992 | PHONE::SWANT | PPTPHT | Fri Mar 13 1992 19:11 | 19 |
| Hans,
Thank you. I am copying your paper, I am sure it will be very
useful. As a software engineer, I too am concerned about RSI.
The "New York Times" on March 3rd & 4th, 1992 ran a two-part
series on `Computer Hand and Arm Injuries' which I clipped and
copied for our nursing service to distribute.
Please send mail is you would like a copy:
PHONE::SWANT
Our nursing service in MKO (Merrimack, New Hampshire) is pushing
strongly to service personnel with ergonomic studies and solutions
to prevent or help RSIs. It becomes very costly to Digital to
treat as opposed to prevent these long lasting problems.
-- Julie
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1805.2 | Also see #1004 | DANGER::FORTMILLER | Ed Fortmiller, BXB2-2, 293-5076 | Mon Mar 16 1992 08:05 | 1 |
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1805.3 | not sure if it is RSI | MCIS2::MACKEY | | Mon Mar 16 1992 11:29 | 13 |
| I am not sure if the problem that I have is related to RSI or not.
The symptoms that I exerience are pain in the forearm and loss
of sensation in part of my hand and the last two fingers. I have
had nerve conductivity studies done and the results show damage
(possible bruising) to the nerve in my elbow. Currently I am
scheduled for surgery to move the nerve from the bottom of my
elbow to the inside. The Doctor has never mentioned this to be
RSI nor do I know of any injuries that would have caused it.
Is this something that I should mention to our local Health
Services??
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1805.4 | Ulnar Nerve Compression | DANGER::FORTMILLER | Ed Fortmiller, BXB2-2, 293-5076 | Mon Mar 16 1992 12:44 | 39 |
| Re .3:
I think what you are describing is Cubital Tunnel Syndrome. And yes
it can be caused by keyboard activity. My neurologist who treats
professional musicians sees this a lot in the left hand of violinists
and says that computer keyboards can cause the same problem (I have it).
One of the nasty things about the DEC LK201 keyboard is that if you are
a touch typist to hit the RETURN key you may have to fully extend the
little finger to its limit to hit the key. If you also
have your arms bent you are duplicating the problem that string players
have. When you stretch your little finger with the arm bent it can
cause a compression of the ulnar nerve just below the elbow.
Quoting from an article titled Unique Upper Extremity Disorders of
Musicians in the book Occupational Disorders of the Upper Extremity
by Dr. Michael E. Charness:
Ulnar Neuropathy
"We have encountered a large number of musicians with ulnar nerve
entrapment at the elbow. Most patients were in their twenties and
thirties and were, on average, about 20 years younger than nonmusicians
with ulnar neuropathy. The ratio of women to men was about 2:1.
Elbow trauma was rare and contributed directly to the neuropathy in
only two musicians. The left side was preferentially involved in
string players and the right or both sides in pianists. The selective
involvement of the left hand in the string players withulnarneuropathy
suggests that sustained elbow flexion with finger movement
(fingerboard, left side) is more important than flexion-extension (bow,
right side) in the pathophysiology of this disorder."
If you are a computer keyboard user I strongly suggest that you discuss
this with your doctor and the Digital nurse. You may also want to
get another opinion as nerve transpositions are risky. I suggest you
read the available medical literature on ulnar nerve transpositions before
having the surgery.
Further discussion of Ulnar Nerve Compression probably should be
moved to topic 739 in the MEDICAL conference.
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1805.5 | | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | conferences are like apple barrels | Mon Mar 16 1992 12:56 | 11 |
| Thnx much for that entry.
I am a touch typist too (rather fast, but lots of mistakes). My
roughest key is the backspace/erase key.
just a minor addendum.
I believe the spelling is Carpal or perhaps Karpal, which should in no way
detract from the thoroughness and utility of the discussion.
'preciate it
herb
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1805.6 | | DANGER::FORTMILLER | Ed Fortmiller, BXB2-2, 293-5076 | Mon Mar 16 1992 14:07 | 8 |
| >I believe the spelling is Carpal or perhaps Karpal
No, I meant Cubital which is different than Carpal. Cubital Tunnel
involves the Ulnar nerve near the elbow and Carpal Tunnel involves
the Median nerve in the hand and specifically in the carpal tunnel.
>withulnarneuropathy
should have been - with ulnar neuropathy
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1805.7 | re .-1 | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | conferences are like apple barrels | Tue Mar 17 1992 08:35 | 5 |
| aha!
thnx
herb
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1805.8 | I Had to have SURGERY for Carpal Tunnel Syndrome | LACV01::WHITE | | Tue Mar 17 1992 11:25 | 30 |
| I had surgery on my right hand in July 89 because of Carpal Tunnel
Syndrome. In my case, it started as numbness in my thumb and first two
fingersof my right hand. Then it progressed to pain at night which
kept waking me up. My doctor put me on naprosyn twice a day for a
month to rule out arthritis. He also took X-rays (Carpal Tunnel does
not show up in an X-ray.
Next step was see an Orthopedic Surgeon who sent me for tests where
they stick needles into your arm to test the degree of damage. Mine
was definitely a surgery case. I now have a scar from the center of my
palm to an inch below my wrist. I went in as a day patient and was
home in three hours and the pain was gone from the affected fingers
immediately. I was out of work over 5 weeks and it was covered under
Workman's Comp. (I've been with Dec since 1974 so have been using a
keyboard for a long time) I know of someone who had it done by laser
just last year at a hospital in Lowell and was able to use her hand
the next day to write.
Six months ago, I started to have pain in the same two fingers again
and the fingers kept locking up on me. I had to have a shot of cortizone
for tendonitis. That helped a little bit but not enough so I had to
have another shot. It's still not the way it should be.
The most important thing is the position of your hands when you are
using your keyboard. Hopefully if you are aware of the right height,
etc of chair versus keyboard you might be able to avoid going through
what I did. Also if you have to have surgery..look into LASER surgery.
little bit but not enough so I had to have
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1805.9 | Try Wristrests, Ergonomic Chair, etc. | PHONE::SWANT | PPTPHT | Tue Mar 17 1992 19:13 | 33 |
| To those of you who are affected by these symptoms, may I strongly
urge you to request the ergonomic study from your nursing service.
I have been told that Digital as a corporate body is very
concerned about the injuries that result from keyboarding and is
pushing the study and resulting solutions.
The Merrimack nursing service together with facilities adjusted
all of my working surfaces: keyboard, desk and chair are all
lower, only my monitor stayed the same. I now use wrist rests for
keyboard and mouse. An ergonomic chair will be ordered as soon as
we find one low enough (I am 5' 2").
My doctor expects that within several months I will be pain free
without undergoing medical procedures!
Your cost center pays for the equipment:
$32 wristrest for LK201 keyboard, #WR021AH
17 wristrest for mouse, #WR175
127 video stand, VT2XX-AA ----> soon to be
18 30" keyboard shelf, VT2XX-AE ----> one unit
350 ergonomic chair
---
$ 544
What is the cost of doctor's visits, surgery, medications, lost
time from work, etc.?
-- Julie
P.S. The photocopy of the New York Times articles includes a
schematic of proper body mechanics at the keyboard. (I need your
mail stop to send a copy.)
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1805.10 | They are slow getting the message out | DANGER::FORTMILLER | Ed Fortmiller, BXB2-2, 293-5076 | Wed Mar 18 1992 08:44 | 61 |
| >I have been told that Digital as a corporate body is very
>concerned about the injuries that result from keyboarding and is
>pushing the study and resulting solutions.
Set FLAME On
Yes, they become very concerned AFTER an injury.
About TWO years ago I was told by one of the
company nurses that there were meetings going on at the corporate
level and that shortly there would be some sort of announcement.
The only time they really become interested (in my opinion) is when
someone walks into their office and complains of an injury. As I walk
by offices I see people using keyboards improperly and they are
likely not even aware of it. I'll be convinced that they care when
they make an effort to inform the entire DEC population that there is
a potential problem. I submitted something to the DELTA IDEAS folks on
4-Oct-1990 about RSI stuff and it has bounced from person to person
and I still don't have what I consider a satisfactory answer.
On 4-Oct-1990 Sent RSI stuff to DELTA
On 13-Feb-1991 Nothing heard so sent an inquiry
On 14-Feb-1991 From Delta - Your idea has been tracked to Product
safety, who sent it to another group.
On 7-Mar-1991 Sent another inquiry
On 20-Mar-1991 Reg NO: DA2228 has been reforwarded to ENV, HTH& SFTY
On 4-Jun-1991 Sent another inquiry
On 5-Aug-1991 Received memo from Aichelmann in MRO which contained
a list of stuff they are doing and also said that
a corporate-wide awareness and training program is
being developed.
On 20-Aug-1991 I send a memo complaining that they are still not
informing the general DEC population and that I
would not consider DA2228 closed until they do so.
On 13-Sep-1991 DELTA tells me that I have been notified that
ENV, HTH& SFTY has responded and ask whether I
was satisified with the response.
On 16-Sep-1991 I reply that the answer was unsatisfactory and I
want to see a corporate commitment.
On 28-Feb-1992 I send out another inquiry
In the meantime there have been articles about RSI stuff in magazines
and newspapers and segments on the news. Still DEC does not come
out and say anything to the entire DEC population. Just last week
I had a friend from MRO call up and complain to me about an RSI injury.
The interesting thing was that the DELTA response memo came from MRO
where they claim to be doing all these wonderful things.
In the mean time corporate meetings are probably still going on and
they are probably still developing training programs but until they
get the message out people are still going to be injured.
Yes, I have an injury and yes they have been responsive, but my other
friends and neighbors are only aware of the problem because I have
spread the message to them.
Set FLAME Off
Ed
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1805.11 | | BEING::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Thu Mar 19 1992 10:26 | 24 |
| Re .10:
That reminds me of another time Digital failed to notify employees
company-wide. After Kevin Mitnick broke into a bunch of systems,
"Network Security" or some such group send out mail to _some_ people
(_some_ system managers) containing some lame suggestions about
security. Not only did they fail to get this information to the people
who made mistakes that let Mitnick in, but the suggested acts would not
have stopped Mitnick!
Digital's not very good about fixing broken things or communicating
with employees.
-- edp
P.S. One of the ways Mitnick got in was to call up a site and complain
that he was out in the field and had forgotten a password. Several
times people gave him a password, and once somebody even spawned a
process for a terminal line he had connected to by modem! Digital
should have sent out mail to EVERY employee saying "Don't give
passwords or accounts to strangers!", but no such mail ever came
around. Mitnick could still get in the same ways he did before.
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1805.12 | Agree with Ed | EPIK::HEILMAN | Tuva or bust... | Thu Mar 19 1992 13:13 | 22 |
| I agree strongly with Ed's (.-2) note, I am also amazed by how many people
there are using computers in a setup that increases the risk for developing
RSI. I would like to see the company aggressively communicate to every
employee:
- that RSI is real and is a rapidly increasing problem in the computer-user
community
- what employees can do to minimize their risk of developing RSI
- what the company will do to support employees in lowering their risk
- what options exist if you have started developing RSI pain
I have seen many employees who have developed pain keep "working through" the
pain, and thereby increase their injury, either through ignorance, fear of
talking to their management about it, or not knowing their options.
Has this been discussed at all in DTW? I called them over a year ago and they
said they wouldn't publish anything until the company had studied it.
I have been doing what I can as an individual to spread the information that I
have, but THIS SHOULDN'T HAVE TO BE MY JOB!
Hans
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1805.13 | New location for my Repetitive Strain Injury document | DECSIM::HEILMAN | Same as it ever was... | Wed Sep 08 1993 10:53 | 9 |
| Re: the document I wrote on RSI which is described in .0:
This document is now at:
DECSIM::DSU$:[HEILMAN.RSI_PUBLIC]
RSI_NOTES.PS, or
RSI_NOTES.TXT
I can also be reached at DECSIM::HEILMAN
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