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5 ways working from home is impacting your body

For those who have found themselves working from home, with little to no notice, because of the coronavirus shutdown, there has been a lot to adjust to — creating a DIY office, figuring out how to exercise without access to a gym, and simply being stuck inside, all at once.

And while it may seem minor from a physical standpoint, that sudden change in routine and environment can be jarring your body.

Young girl working at home on a personal computer in the room. A woman sitting on a chair and typing on the computer. Vector illustration with working home concept. Flat design style
This has become many of us. Photo: Getty

“The body is incredibly interconnected and depends on multiple feedback loops or lines of communication to perform all of its normal duties,” Dr. Leah Welsh, an osteopathic family and integrative-medicine physician at the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, tells Yahoo Life.

“This includes physical positioning, mental activity, emotional support and stress — everything that happens to and inside of us, the body keeps track.”

Your body gets used to having certain rhythms and routines, and relies on a schedule of sorts to function consistently, Welsh says.

“These queues and rhythms are very different for a lot of us in this new stay-at-home chapter,” she says.

It’s not all bad, she notes — there are just a few common traps that can throw your body out of whack.

Keep these points in mind.

You’re moving a lot less and sitting more

If you worked outside your home before this, the lower-than-usual level of activity can be a jolt to your body. “A lot of us are not moving as much as we normally would — we’re not walking to work, walking from our car to the office, or getting up and moving around an office,” Dr. Jessalynn Adam, an orthopedist with Baltimore's Mercy Medical Center, tells Yahoo Life.

“The space between your home office and your kitchen is probably much smaller than it is at your normal work site. It’s very easy to move a lot less than you normally would in terms of daily activities.”

That can lead to a host of issues, including back pain, joint pain and muscle soreness. To combat it, Adam recommends getting up and walking around your place at regular intervals. (You can even set an alarm to go off every hour or so to remind you.)

Varying how you work can help, too, Dr. Arash Lavian, a physical medicine, rehabilitation and pain management specialist at Cedars-Sinai Kerlan-Jobe Institute in Santa Monica says.

“You want to limit how much time you spend sitting behind a computer,” he tells Yahoo Life.

Lavian recommends creating a space where you have your own standing desk (a kitchen island or stack of books on your kitchen table can work), and alternating your working hours between sitting and standing.

Father with his little son working from home
We've definitely been sitting more. Photo: Getty

You’re hunched over your computer

Most office setups are designed to maximise ergonomics on the job. Your computer is (or should be) set up so you’re looking straight at it when you work and your office chair is supportive, all to try to keep you comfortable while you work.

At home, that can be a little trickier to pull off, especially if you’re using a laptop on your actual lap. That can lead to a hunched posture, which isn’t ideal.

“Having a scrunched, hunched desk posture typically causes an imbalance between the front of the chest, shoulders, ribs cage, and the back of the head, neck, and jaw,” Welsh says. “I talk about this a lot with patients.”

Adam says she’s spoken to many patients lately, via telemedicine, who say they’re struggling with the fallout of hunching over a computer. “I’ve heard from a lot of patients that they’re having more neck and back pain,” she says.

The goal is to keep your body in proper alignment and keep the right posture while you’re working. Adam recommends making sure that your computer is positioned high enough on your work area so that you’re not looking down at it, and that your knees are positioned at a 90-degree angle to the floor. If you think of it, rolling your shoulders back a few times during your day can help too, she says.

You’re in front of screens a lot more than usual

Not being able to go to restaurants, stores or basically anywhere else means you have a lot more time than usual to kill. That can lead to long stretches spent in front of your TV and on your phone — and that can be rough on your eyes.

Back view of Asian business woman talking to her colleagues about plan in video conference. Multiethnic business team using computer for a online meeting in video call. Group of people smart working from home.
You’re in front of screens a lot more than usual. Photo: Getty

“Prolonged screen time can increase symptoms of eye strain, dry eyes and headaches,” Dr. Carolyn Duong, an ophthalmologist at UCLA Health, tells Yahoo Life.

“Computer strain occurs because our blink rates tend to decrease when using computers, which can also exacerbate symptoms of dry eyes. Using digital devices (like your phone) that are often angled or at various distances can increase symptoms of eye strain and glare.”

To keep your eyes healthy, she recommends increasing the contrast on your screens to try to reduce glare. Resting your eyes using the 20-20-20 rule (every 20 minutes, look 20 feet away for 20 seconds) can also help relieve eye strain, she says.

And, if you’re dealing with symptoms of dry eye (which include a stinging, burning, or scratchy feeling in your eyes, watery eyes, and blurred vision, per the American Optometric Association), Duong says artificial tears can help.

You’re not wearing shoes

Working from home means you’re free to wear — or not wear — whatever you’d like. But, if you wore shoes pretty regularly before the pandemic, Levian says it’s not a good idea to suddenly go barefoot all the time.

“Your body is used to having arch support from shoes,” he explains. “When you suddenly don’t have that support because you’re constantly barefoot, it can affect your alignment and posture.”

That can cause pain in your hips, back, knees and feet, he says. It can also lead to heel pain and conditions like plantar fasciitis, which is inflammation of the band of tissue that connects the bone in your heel to your toes, she says.

That doesn’t mean you shouldn’t go barefoot at all — you just want to limit how much you do it. “An easy fix is to wear a pair of house shoes that give you some arch support and cushion the heel to balance out walking on a hard surface,” Adam says.

You’re working out on a hard surface

At the gym, you likely exercise on a floor that’s specially designed to absorb shock, Levian says. But that’s not a feature you can rely on if you have hardwood floors at home. “That can be harder on your muscles and joints when you work out,” he says.

That’s why Adam recommends that you still “gear up” the same way you would if you were going to the gym to work out, making sure you put on sneakers with good support and shock absorbing qualities vs. trying to exercise barefoot (unless, of course, you’re doing yoga or Pilates). If you have carpet, an area rug or a yoga mat, Levian says it’s a good idea to work out on one of those for extra support.

“You want to try to recreate some of the softer surfaces you see at the gym,” he says.

If you’re suddenly struggling with muscle or joint pain, don’t hesitate to call your doctor for help. But experts swear that trying to make these little tweaks to your new daily routine can help.

“Just do your best,” Adam says.

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