
Occupational injuries are one of the most important and preventable health problems that occur daily in the world. Being preventable, they represent a problem of human capital for business and a disabling social and economic factor for the affected worker. The simultaneous impact goes far beyond the lost time, missed schedules and production delays. In past years, dozens of current labor resources of older people employed in non-ergonomic jobs have never been grafted into improved ergonomics as part of today's assessment of the cost of human capital. The abnormal heights of workstations, non-electric hand tools and warehouse storage areas explain the many simply avoidable musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs) that are facing the challenges of aging today.
According to a report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics published in the 2005 report, out of 1.3 million of the sprains and strains that were reported, often involving the back, 43 percent of these injuries required more than one day of recovery from work on the day of the incident. combining simple stretching and soft tissue damage with bruises and sprains, ruptures and fractures, approximately two thirds of all these cases are resolved in cumulative lost working time, not counting the day of injury.
The National System for Electronic Accident Surveillance (NEISS) in the Journal of the American Medical Association contains reports and reports on non-fatal accidents from US hospital wards in the United States. NEISS uses a stratified sample of 67–70 hospitals and # 39; emergency departments that monitor injury trends 24/7 to help with preventive measures by comparing monthly reviews from 5,300 hospitals to separate work-related and non-work-related injuries.
The US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) of December 4, 2009, in which the earliest injuries to the trunk are the most significant (back), discloses a common denominator among other reporting agencies with the same data - BLS, OSHA, CDC, to name a few. The main factor indicating that the deviation in the greatest number of absences, which directly correlates with the list below, was excessive / over-exertion (hyperextension) of the muscles due to: (1) weight lifting, (2) pushing, pulling or carrying heavy objects ; (3) drops one level; (4) a physical reaction to avoid obstacles; (5) contact with the object or equipment; (6) repetitive movement (tendonitis); (7) fractures of limbs or joints; (8) carpal tunnel syndrome; (9) complex regional pain syndrome; and (10) fall to a lower level. In the 2008 BLS Survey of Occupational Injuries, nearly 19 million state and local government workers reported MSD injuries, firefighters, and law enforcement officers remain the highest among all workers, with 14.8 per 100 cases. However, the same report reflects the fact that these employees of state and local governments are 1.5 times higher than the same as the private sector. While these statistics reflect high human capital costs for lost work time, medical costs and their subsequent socioeconomic impact on victims, OSHA and other organizations collect data from only a small fraction of private sector institutions in the United States or approximately 80,000 out of 7.5 million people. Therefore, the data does not actually represent a large part of the business, especially small business, where data transfer is impossible. Even the payment boards of government employees do not take into account institutions with fewer than 15 employees, so a conclusion should not be made only from this data.
Small business or self-employed trauma affects the economic and social impact to a much greater degree when loss of time leads to loss of income for the self-employed. Numerous self-employed individuals interviewed stated that they could not justify the cost-benefit ratio for an employee’s insurance indemnity and choose to work “at risk”. Drawing a parallel with the JAMA 2007 injury report and Indiana employees, this year’s Compensation Report, back injury accounted for more than 53% of all work-related injuries, exacerbated by abnormal or repetitive movement, bending or lifting.
To succeed in lower back injury, further evidence leads to severe carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) as one of the highest diseases in absenteeism. The cost of human capital in 1998 showed that three out of every 10,000 workers missed ten days at a total cost of $ 30,000 per person for a long period of time. Surprised that CTS reported such a high cost of human capital, I decided to investigate this topic in order to clarify the misconception that CTS was a nightmare for a computer operator. Carpal tunnel syndrome is a neuropathic disease in which the peripheral nerves of the body are compressed or injured by trauma inside the carpal tunnel, a hard passage containing ligaments and bones surrounding the median nerve, usually on the wrist. This nerve controls sensations on the palmar side of the thumb and fingers, without the little finger, as well as impulses to the small muscles that allow you to move your fingers and fingers.
Who is at risk for CTS? According to the National Institutes of Health (NIH), women develop carpal tunnel syndrome three times more often. Another erroneous opinion, I assumed that this is due to the fact that a higher percentage of women working in the workplace are engaged in administrative work related to computer activity. Not true. In fact, a report from the Mayo Clinic in 2001 found that intensive computer use (an average of 7 hours per day) does not increase a person’s chances of developing CTS.
Settling the myth. According to Dr. Mark Sauder, a family practice physician in Auburn, Indiana, with an active roster of over 8,500 patients and a doctor voting for the 2010 Indiana, states: "Women may look more prone to this disease because their carpal tunnel is just smaller by size I see a lot of pipeline personnel with neuropathic and tendon disorders caused by a multitude of stressful circumstances that lived and were classified as recurring movement disorders, such as bursitis or Tendi nit. First, I rule out congenital disorders, such as rheumatoid arthritis, overactive glandular activity, cysts and tumors. I then determine whether excessive repetition, vibration or mechanical problems of the wrist itself exist. Year, co-authored by InMed, a company that evaluates new technologies, I tried a new therapeutic method - RiteTemp Medical for workers working in the service sector of musculoskeletal disorders related information. RiteTemp uses anatomical correct optimal temperature cold therapeutic devices that are not cold l ike ice or gel. These devices effectively provide continuous cooling in the middle of Fahrenheit, so people can wear any RiteTemp device without worrying about frostbite and its complications. This is a truly effective treatment combined with conditioning and flexing of the tendons and ligaments to speed healing and return to the affected area. What I found in my test that is ideal for RiteTemp as a modality is a higher patient compliance and a reduction in the need for pain techniques. "
The highest-risk occupations for the carpal tunnel were sewing machines and a manufacturer of assembly production requiring repeated hand movement with intricate movements. By asking around, I actually discovered a major sewing operation in the USA, whose owner takes the initiative in curbing injuries in the workplace. Hentz Manufacturing and owner of Markfore, Bob Hinty from Fort Wayne, Indiana, is the advocate for preventive medicine and conditioning therapy for his employees. Hinty is one of the largest sewing, silk-screen and embroidery operations in the USA, which offers exceptional quality, fast reamer, specialized and individual sewing, which is a high-quality line of handbags and computer cases. Disco is a bed for mobile vehicles of military personnel in the field. Hinti, at his facilities, uses an individual approach every day to tap into working conditions, comply with safety requirements and go so far as to set up workplaces to take into account the fine work of an exceptionally high worker, especially when workers turn to different jobs.
“Human ergonomics has many aspects, and they all must harmoniously coexist on a facility with a large production volume,” Hinti says. “When cross-training is required, which is associated with an atypical motor skill or non-ergonomic functions, my supervisors regularly use the use of medical therapeutic devices RiteTemp in the preparation and training of the body.” His recipe for success is a combination of mechanical science and human ergonomics, which produces a “work of art” in the high-quality fashion line Cinda B of specialized handbags and totes. Hinty is at the forefront of watching the Gerber Cutter implement a new production project with one of its employees wearing RiteTemp Wrist-Forearm to break the strain using new muscles until the muscles become affected by an atypical movement.
When it comes to referring to a baby boomer population that has been working for at least 3 decades, I, fortunately, had an orthopedic surgeon who is one of several physicians participating in the pain study, which uses devices for treating Classical therapy RiteTemp Medical in both before and after - surgical recuperative treatment. The excellent example below was supported by Dr. Richard Steinfeld, an orthopedic surgeon in Vero Beach, Florida, who recently caused arthroscopic surgery on a business owner who works daily on his feet to clear a torn ACL (acruciate ligament) and a meniscus in his right knee joint. Removing a badly torn meniscus during arthroscopy revealed an impending problem facing this baby boomer and our aging work - arthritis and other degenerative diseases of the joints.
Expected due to excessive rotation or torsion of the knee joint during high-energy exercises, in this case the patient experienced a prolonged exacerbation of the knee joint due to repeated pounding pressure on the joint. Upon completion of arthroscopy, I was privileged to have the opportunity to examine the patient's trauma and the postoperative exit with Dr. Steinfeld. While the operation was successful, what was not originally detected by X-ray patients before the operation was degenerative arthritis, which was diagnosed as common among baby boomers from trying to be too healthy. According to Dr. Steinfeld, a former maritime surgeon who runs a private practice in Vero Beach, Fla., "The patient described here now, who told Dr. Steinfeld and after that to me in his preoperative interview, that on younger days, he regularly ran five or more miles a day in a hilly country, played rocket schools twice a week and actively pursued baseball as often as possible. This patient is similar to many I see, who finally succumbed to arthritis .... He will need a general replacement of the joints in the very near future, as he has bone on the bone, shaking together, creating friction and discomfort.
As a participant in the pain study, the treatment prescribed by Dr. Steinfeld for this patient, recovering from outpatient arthroscopy surgery, was to use RiteTemp Active Knee as a treatment at the earliest opportunity and to continue to wear the cooling device as much as possible during the coming weeks. from all devices for treating cold or gel, this medical device can be worn without interference, as it does not catch cold, like ice or gel. This is a two-component device with a live hinge for flexible bending on all body types, as the knee bends during normal driving. While I was not interested in getting a picture of this new active device for treating cold knee treatment used by this patient, an information video describing this new “active way” for physical therapy can be viewed on YouTube and refer to RiteTemp Medical Active Knee ,
After a 30-day follow-up with Dr. Steinfeld about this patient, Dr. Steinfeld reported that this patient was religious in using the refrigeration device as often as possible and that pre-cooling this patient's knee for one hour with the RiteTemp device before surgery, in his opinion, helped to reduce typical postoperative pain and swelling. He noted that the patient sometimes reported using ibuprofen and did not take prescribed painkillers confirming the patient’s higher adherence to the recovery period and faster recovery associated with using RiteTemp as the best modality.
For more information about this “active medicine” technology, visit ritetempmedical.com or email me at kathryndoh99@gmail.com, and I’m happy to tell you about decent medical information.

