Online price list gives you clarity for your health care
Online hospital charge lists can give you clarity for your healthcare costs, but like our medical care – we want to personalize it to you.
It’s no secret that long hours in front of a computer screen can do a number on your spine. In fact, back pain is one of the most common reasons people see their doctor.
Your office chair may be a convenient scapegoat for your back pain, but sitting still (with bad posture) for hours on end is a much more likely target of your angst.
“Office workers are vulnerable to prolonged sitting, and thus one of the highest occupations to have complaints of spine discomfort and pain,” says Whitney Luke, MD, with the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation at Ohio State Wexner Medical Center.
Those who can moderately reduce their time sitting have been found to have fewer musculoskeletal pain complaints and improved mood and productivity, according to Dr. Luke.Sean Meers, PT, DPT, a physical therapist at The Ohio State University Comprehensive Spine Center, says the best way to prevent back and neck pain is with movement and exercise.
To that end, here are several easy exercises and stretches you can do without leaving your office. Meers says you should aim to do at least one of these each day:
Neck Retractions with Extension
1. Neck Retractions with Extension: This position can reduce pressure on your spine by about 20 to 30 pounds and engage the muscles around your spine. Additionally, this move can ease pressure on the front part of your spine and stretch your neck opposite from the position we typically are in throughout the day when working on the computer.
Wall Push-Up
2. Wall Push-Ups: This movement is helpful to unload the spine (by nature of standing while you do it), and will increase trunk muscle and arm strength to better support your spine.