Is Your Home Office Detrimental To Your Health?
Working from home offers many comforts but there are health risks associated with it that you may not have considered.
05/05/2021
It’s uncertain how long remote working will
still be in force, but if a recent survey by
Flexjobs, a US jobs listing site is anything to
go by, it may be for some time. The survey
showed that an astonishing 65 percent of
pandemic remote workers want to keep on working
from home, with 58 percent saying they’d look
for a new job if they had to return to the
office.
Working from home offers many
comforts, such as your work commute being
reduced to a few short steps and the “canteen”
only as far away as your fridge, but there are
health risks associated with it that you may not
have considered.
Offices feature
furniture specially designed for long hours of
sitting, expertly placed overhead lighting, and
computer screens set up at the correct height.
Cleaning staff also regularly wipe down desks,
vacuum and mop floors, and sanitise kitchens
areas and bathrooms.
If your WFH office
is a more casually set up affair, and you don’t
have a regular cleaner coming in to help you,
Aisha Pandor of SweepSouth suggests taking these
steps below to help mitigate health risks
associated with WFH offices.
1. Don’t eat lunch at your desk
Most of us don’t think
twice about eating at our desks, but research
shows that it can be detrimental to our health.
A study done by microbiologist Dr. Charles Gerba
of the University of Arizona to measure
bacterial levels in offices shows that personal
work areas contain alarmingly high levels of
bacteria.
Desks, in particular, are
teeming with germs, and eating at your desk can
turn it into a bacteria super fest. It’s not the
fact that you’re eating at your desk that’s
unhealthy, it’s crumbs and tiny food particles
left behind that bacteria feast on. In fact, Dr.
Gerbera says, the average desk harbours 100
times more bacteria than a kitchen table!
Your WFH desk can support 10 million
bacteria, and without proper cleaning, even a
small area may contain bacteria that can make
you ill. Keep your work surface hygienic by
regularly cleaning it with an antibacterial
product.
2. Wipe germs off your keyboard
If you nip out to the shops for milk, make sure you wash your hands thoroughly before you sit down at your desk again and check what emails came through while you were away. It’s important to practice good hand hygiene throughout the day, even if we don’t leave our homes.
According to British microbiologist Professor Sally Bloomfield, our hands and the surfaces we touch are the superhighways for bacteria. And, because we touch our phones and keyboards so often, they top the list of the dirtiest items on our desks. Wipe them down weekly to keep them clean. It’s impractical to think you can turn your home into a sterile zone, but you can stop your WFH space from becoming a bacterial battleground. If it feels exhausting balancing work, home duties and cleaning, hire a SweepStar to help tidy and clean for a few hours each week.
3. Vacuum your workspace
Any bits of food or biscuit crumbs that fall onto the floor or into hard-to-reach areas behind your desk can attract rats and cockroaches, bringing even more germs into the fray. Clean the floor around your desk regularly, especially if you have carpets. Carpets feel great underfoot, but they act as a trap for dirt, hair and dust mites.
Humans lose around 1 million skin particles and between 50-100 strands of hair every day, which means that as you sit at your WFH desk quietly typing away, you’re also busy being a human shedding machine! Even air pollutants like pollen, fungi and cigarette smoke get trapped in carpet fibres, and can trigger allergies, asthma and eczema attacks. It’s best, say the experts, to vacuum carpets and rugs at least twice a week, and more in high traffic areas.
4. Sitting is the new smoking
We’ve all heard that sitting is the new smoking, with warnings that sitting at a desk all day can be a major health hazard. According to a study in the Annals of Internal Medicine, sedentary behaviour can raise the risk of developing a disease like heart disease or Type 2 diabetes. Even if you exercise every day, sitting for long periods can still be problematic. It’s key to get up every hour and do a quick stretch or walk for at least a minute or two. A longer walk will be even better, boosting your circulation and helping to keep your joints, muscles, and ligaments loose.
5. Is your chair hurting your back?
The chair you sit in is very important. Most
WFH chairs are dining room or kitchen chairs,
suited only for short sitting sessions. A good
chair -- ideally an ergonomically designed
office chair -- will support your back and
reduce aggravation to the spine. Well-designed
ergonomic chairs aren’t cheap, so consider
renting one from Teloy, who offer specially
designed office chairs that provide great lumbar
support.
It’s also vital to be aware of
your posture. We tend to slouch without even
noticing it when we’ve been sitting in a chair
for too long, which places a lot of pressure
around the hips and back and strains the spine.
It’s not just slouching that’s bad, though --
sitting up straight and curving your back too
much can put strain on it, too. Lastly, add
abdominal strengthening exercises to your
exercise routine. Having strong abdominal
muscles helps with proper spine alignment and
can relieve the pressure that sitting puts on
your lower back.
6. Try to minimise eye strain
With remote working, everything
happens via your screen, from the work you’re
doing to Zoom meetings held with colleagues and
clients, to the lunch you eat while checking
emails on your phone.
Straining your
vision can lead to blurry, overly sensitive
eyes, watery or too-dry eyes, headaches, and
Computer Vision Syndrome (CVS). CVS is
characterised by blurred vision, acute headaches
and severe eye irritation, caused by hours of
looking at rapidly flickering screens, where eye
muscles are unable to recover from the constant
tension required to maintain focus on a close
object. It’s a reversible condition, but
symptoms may become more severe if you don’t
change the way you use screens.
Make sure
your computer monitor is placed slightly below
eye level and about 60cm from your eyes, adjust
the screen’s glare so that it’s not too bright,
and reduce the amount of light that falls onto
your monitor. If your desk is close to a window,
use blinds or curtains to eliminate brightness.
Most importantly, take frequent breaks. Our
eye muscles contract when we look at something
close by, and relax when we look away, so every
30 minutes, try to look away from your screen
for a short period of time.
Working from
home offers so many perks, but it can be
intense. Make it both productive and enjoyable
by taking regular breaks to lessen the stress on
your body and health.