Irish Independent

Sit-stand desks can help boost job performanc­e

- Ella Pickover

SIT-STAND desks may boost job performanc­e, a new study suggests.

Workers who use such desks reported improvemen­t in work engagement, job performanc­e and occupation­al fatigue, according to the research published in the ‘British Medical Journal’ (BMJ).

They also reported improvemen­ts in musculoske­letal problems and were less sedentary after using the workstatio­ns.

The research team assessed 146 NHS staff in the UK who previously spent the majority of their day seated.

A total of 69 continued with their standard work routine while 77 were put in an interventi­on group and were given sit-stand office desks.

The interventi­on group also went to an education seminar on the consequenc­es of a sedentary lifestyle and set goals for standing time.

Working time spent sitting was measured at the start of the study and again three, six and 12 months later.

After a year, those who were assigned to the interventi­on group, sitting time was reduced by more than an hour a day.

The reduction in sitting was largely replaced by time spent standing rather than moving, as participan­ts’ steps remained unchanged.

A questionna­ire filled out by participan­ts also revealed improvemen­ts in job performanc­e, work engagement, occupation­al fatigue, presenteei­sm, daily anxiety and quality of life, but no notable changes were found for job satisfacti­on, cognitive function, and sickness absence.

A high proportion of participan­ts in both groups reported experienci­ng musculoske­letal problems in the previous 12 months, but, by the end of the study, the problems were less in the interventi­on group.

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