Lounging on the sofa may be great for relaxing, but it's not the best option for work.
With many of us working from home at least part of the week, there are likely to be millions of people sitting at laptops or PCs in our lounges, bedrooms, or kitchens - and not all of us will be in the right posture for healthy working.
How we work in these ‘home office' spaces matters just as much as it does in our employers’ offices.
If we want to avoid health conditions such as back pain, eye strain, repetitive strain injury and other issues, we need a good workspace set up wherever we are.
When researchers looked at health complaints being reported online a year into the pandemic, when many more people than before were working from home, they found that 56% more of us, around 4.7 million, were reporting headaches than in January 2019.
Complaints of another issue often caused by poor desk posture, wrist pain, went up by 96% in the same period.
Because remote working at least one or two days each week is now the norm for many of us, that amounts to at least 20-40% of working hours when any of us could be risking injury and experiencing significant physical stress if our home office set up is not ergonomic.