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You Are Here: Home > Learn More > Medical & Dental Ergonomics > 8 Keys to Selecting Great Seating for Long-Term Health8 Keys to Selecting Great Seating for Long-Term HealthThe following is a reprint of an article that was featured in the September 2005 issue of "Dentistry Today" entitled, "The Eight Keys to Selecting Great Seating for Long-Term Health" by Dr. David J. Ahearn. The fully seated dental operating position combined with the air turbine handpiece ushered in what has been known as the golden age of dentistry. This increase in capacity, along with the baby boom, launched a rise in dental incomes and formed the foundation for success of the dental profession as we know it. For today's health conscious practitioners these innovations are also important for having helped reduce the number of practice-induced "hunchbacks" in the later stages of a professional career. Perhaps you have noticed these poor older practitioners at your last dental meeting (Figure 1).
Unfortunately, most in the field treated these great technological successes as the end of the journey, as we turned our attention to the other great opportunities our blossoming profession has created. Scientific effort was transferred to ancillary devices (such as curing lights, resins, intraoral cameras, etc) that served to broaden the scope of services, further stimulating the profession's ascendance. Today, a general dental practitioner's income is greater than that of a family physician's. However, this success is not without its problems. Low back pain is the leading cause of occupational disability in dentistry. Studies clearly show that low back pain is frequently related to sitting duration. When sitting was first introduced to dentistry, most dentists spent their day doing amalgams. The procedures were fast and easy. Today, with the wide range of services offered, many practitioners find themselves in a fixed seated position for extended time periods--a situation that is extremely deleterious to the spine and to physical health in general. The evolution to the seated position is just the beginning of our journey. A new look at dental practitioner positioning must occur as we pursue greater performance, and as a result, incomes comparable to other surgical professionals, behind which we currently lag. In order to discover how to minimize problems protracted sitting causes and gain the maximum benefit from the advantages sitting offers, it would be helpful to know a bit more about the spinal column--how it works and how spinal health relates to sitting. Many experts in the field believe sitting is, in fact, not a particularly healthy position, but that it just happens to be the most practical position from which to operate machines. Some, such as Dr. Galen Cranz of the University of California, have argued that in preindustrialized society the seated position existed solely for ceremonial purposes. Many civilizations, such as Japan and India, did not utilize chairs throughout thousand of years of their development. The human spine and its support musculature is a living structure that benefits from movement. Our shock-absorbent disks must have motion in order to be nourished properly. Any attempt at physically constraining the spine in a so-called "proper position" will ultimately meet with failure. If there can be no perfect position, by definition there can be no perfect chair. The best chair will be the seat that in the context of the task to be performed minimizes the damage done by sitting while allowing its occupant to transition through the hundreds of postures, all of which vary in their level of imperfection. So, if the seat is our best hope for a productive dental practice and yet it still has the potential for damaging our health, how should we study and improve sitting? What are the criteria for a great operator stool?
Beginning with training in most dental schools, the young practitioner learns to accommodate to institutional equipment often purchased primarily for its price and durability or as part of a complete equipment package. Support, the reason for a chair's existence, is relegated to a position of minor importance, or worse, ignored (Figures 2a and 2b). After graduation, when faced with the expense of an office start-up, many items supersede the young practitioner's attention to seating. Worries about the cost of x-ray machines and handpieces, as well as attracting patients, easily overshadow concerns about a place to sit. And so the limber young professional begins a career filled with awkward positions day in and day out. It seems that ergonomics, and with it proper seating, only emerge as priorities once discomfort or injury encroach, thus adding the need for a chair to rehabilitate as well as support the practitioner. While it is to a certain extent true that there are a wide range of apparent seating preferences, these preferences break down into a limited number of discrete characteristics. If you know where you want to go, it is without question easier to determine how to get there. Just as a bed is your most used and thus most important piece of household furniture, so should the operator stool be at the center of your office ergonomic purchasing plan, because its contact and use shapes the overwhelming percent of your day. Let's begin to look at the ideal operator's stool from the ground up in order to ensure the support that is right for you and your practice. Following are 8 keys to selecting the proper stool.
No. 1: Cast star base construction with high-quality casters and bearings
No. 2: Fully adjustable hydraulic gas lift
No. 3: True waterfall-style seat support True waterfall design, while just one of a number of concepts in ergonomic seating, is an essential principle. Your chair must be designed so that the seating position can be slightly elevated beyond the parallel without restricting blood flow to the legs. This allows an operator to maintain a forward and upward posture while operating and transfers some of the body's support to the feet. We refer to this as "leg balanced sitting" (Figure 5).
No. 4: Rapid and easy-to-use adjustments
No. 5: Strong forward base-tilt capability
No. 6: Strong lumbar support without shoulder impingement
No. 7: Firm, supportive seating surfaces
No. 8: Options for personalization
When a dental stool is outfitted with arm support, the arms may be fixed in length but must allow rapid height adjustment and full articulation. If you find yourself leaning on nearby cabinets or resting your arm on your patient's head, then you need a new stool, a new position to practice from, and possibly support arms.
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