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Muscle Biofeedback at the Computer
is an exciting and indispensable guide for the prevention
of Repetitive Strain Injury (RSI). This comprehensive text
provides clinicians or the computer user with step-by-step
instructions for implementing proven strategies to promote
healthy computing. It is based upon using muscle feedback
(surface electromyography) with the eight components for healthy
computing. The book details the “nuts and bolts”
of how to do it! It teaching how to use muscle feedback and
outlines in detail a seven session group training program
to become an effective coach. It gives guidelines and techniques
to apply muscle feedback for awareness, assessment, training
and coaching fellow employees. As Denise Fox Needleman, Associate
Vice President, Human Resources, Safety & Risk Management
of San Francisco State University, states: ”Their peer-based
models and techniques for ergonomic safety have been the most
effective methods we have found to reduce our injuries.”
This
book describes a proven approach in which work units that
had no Worker Compensation Claims had trained coaches while
work units with the most claims had no coaches. For this work,
the San Francisco State University Ergonomic Safety Program
received a Governor of California Employee Safety Award.
Peper
and Gibney present to the reader a systems perspective for
maintaining health while working at the computer. They debunk
many of the conventional myths surrounding employee safety
and provide scientific and anecdotal evidence that attests
to the efficacy of the concepts they present. Also included
are many of the challenges and concerns for both individuals
and corporations who contemplate changes in work styles, ergonomics
or corporate culture. For example, understanding that Administrators
might miss the value of financially supporting a healthy computing
program, Peper and Gibney provide references to address cost
concerns and provide evidence that implementing their program
reduces discomfort and costs. They also present many of the
challenges that they have encountered and suggest resolutions
for these concerns.
Chapters
7 and 8 will likely be most coveted by entrepreneurs seeking
to translate knowledge into action in the workplace and are
worth more than the price of the whole book. Here Peper and
Gibney provide a brilliant template for replicating San Francisco
State University’s award-winning 'Healthy Computing'
program in various settings. The empirical foundations of
the suggestions made throughout the section are presented
and the materials necessary for executing a 'Healthy Computing'
program are laid out in sequence and include many samples
of handouts.
Muscle
Biofeedback at the Computer provides a consistent 'you can
do this' message, where the 'you' is anyone who uses a computer
and the 'this' is learning how to optimize your health while
computing. In a clear-cut fashion, Peper and Gibney succeed
at educating as well as entertaining the reader about a topic
that would mostly be of interest to a clinical researcher
or specialist.
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