desk-ergonomic-checklist

Assesses desk setup for ergonomic risks: chair height, monitor position, keyboard/mouse placement, lighting, movement breaks, upgrade prioritization.

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Install skill "desk-ergonomic-checklist" with this command: npx skills add harrylabsj/desk-ergonomic-checklist

Desk Ergonomic Checklist

Safety Boundary

This skill offers practical, self-assessment guidance for optimizing desk setups. It is informational only and does not constitute medical, physiotherapy, or occupational health advice. If you experience persistent pain, numbness, tingling, or have a diagnosed musculoskeletal condition, consult a qualified healthcare professional before making changes.

When to Use / When Not to Use

Use this skill when you want to:

  • Evaluate your current desk setup for common ergonomic risk factors.
  • Make low-cost adjustments to improve comfort during long desk hours.
  • Prioritize which equipment upgrades will have the biggest impact.
  • Build movement breaks into your workday.

Do not use this skill to:

  • Diagnose or treat repetitive strain injury (RSI), carpal tunnel syndrome, or back disorders.
  • Replace personalized assessment from an ergonomist, physiotherapist, or occupational health specialist.
  • Ignore pain or warning signs that require medical attention.

The Six Checkpoints

1. Chair & Seat Position

Checklist:

  • Feet rest flat on the floor or on a footrest.
  • Knees are at approximately 90–110 degrees.
  • Thighs are parallel to the floor or slightly angled down.
  • Lower back is supported by the chair's lumbar support or a small cushion.
  • You can sit back fully without perching on the edge.

Quick Fixes:

  • If feet dangle, add a footrest or stack books.
  • If lumbar support is missing, roll a small towel and place it at the small of your back.
  • If the chair is too deep, add a cushion behind you to reduce seat depth.

Upgrade Priority: High — the chair is your primary support surface.

2. Monitor Position & Eye Level

Checklist:

  • Top of the screen is at or slightly below eye level.
  • Screen is approximately an arm's length away (50–70 cm / 20–28 inches).
  • Screen is directly in front of you, not off to one side.
  • You are not tilting your head up or down to view the screen.
  • Text is large enough to read without leaning forward or squinting.

Quick Fixes:

  • Raise the monitor with books, a box, or a dedicated monitor stand.
  • Lower the monitor if your neck is extended upward.
  • Increase text scaling/zoom in your operating system.
  • For laptops: use an external keyboard and raise the laptop screen to eye level.

Upgrade Priority: High — monitor position drives neck posture.

3. Keyboard & Mouse Placement

Checklist:

  • Keyboard is positioned so elbows stay at approximately 90 degrees.
  • Wrists are straight (not bent up, down, or sideways) when typing.
  • Mouse is at the same height and distance as the keyboard.
  • You are not reaching forward or to the side for the mouse.
  • Shoulders are relaxed, not hunched or elevated.

Quick Fixes:

  • Move the keyboard closer so your elbows stay near your torso.
  • If the keyboard has feet, keep them flat to reduce wrist extension.
  • Place the mouse directly beside the keyboard, not above or far to the side.
  • Consider a wrist rest for padding during pauses, not while actively typing.

Upgrade Priority: Medium — adjustments often solve issues without new hardware.

4. Lighting & Glare

Checklist:

  • No direct light source (window or lamp) shines directly into your eyes.
  • No bright light is directly reflected on the screen.
  • The room has balanced ambient lighting; neither too dark nor overly bright.
  • Task lighting is available for paperwork, separate from screen lighting.
  • You are not working in a completely dark room with only the screen on.

Quick Fixes:

  • Close blinds or reposition the monitor perpendicular to windows.
  • Adjust screen brightness to match ambient light levels.
  • Use a desk lamp with a diffused shade for paper tasks.
  • Enable night mode / blue-light reduction in the evening if it helps your comfort.

Upgrade Priority: Low — usually fixable with positioning and settings.

5. Movement & Breaks

Checklist:

  • You stand up or change position at least once every 30–60 minutes.
  • You perform brief stretches for neck, shoulders, wrists, and back during breaks.
  • You vary tasks throughout the day (typing, calls, reading, walking).
  • You take a micro-break (20–30 seconds) every 10 minutes if doing intensive mouse/keyboard work.

Quick Break Routine (2 minutes):

  1. Stand up and roll shoulders backward 5 times.
  2. Gently tilt head side to side, holding 10 seconds each.
  3. Extend arms forward, open and close fists 10 times.
  4. Walk to get water or look out a window for 30 seconds.
  5. Sit back down with fresh posture awareness.

Upgrade Priority: Critical — no setup replaces movement.

6. Workspace Environment

Checklist:

  • Desk height allows forearms to rest parallel to the floor.
  • There is enough clearance under the desk for knees and legs.
  • Frequently used items (phone, notepad) are within easy reach.
  • Cables are managed to avoid awkward reaching or tripping.
  • Temperature and airflow are comfortable (not too hot, cold, or drafty).

Quick Fixes:

  • If the desk is too high, raise your chair and add a footrest.
  • If the desk is too low, consider desk risers or a different desk.
  • Keep the top third of the desk clear for forearm support.

Scoring Your Setup

Count your checked boxes across all six checkpoints:

ScoreAssessmentAction
20–25ExcellentMaintain and continue regular breaks.
14–19GoodAddress unchecked items with quick fixes.
8–13Needs ImprovementPrioritize high-impact changes (chair, monitor).
0–7High RiskMake immediate adjustments; consider professional assessment if pain exists.

Upgrade Prioritization Guide

If you can invest in one improvement at a time:

  1. Chair with adjustable lumbar support and armrests — biggest impact on spinal health.
  2. External monitor or laptop stand + keyboard — fixes neck posture for laptop users.
  3. Adjustable desk (sit-stand) — enables position variation throughout the day.
  4. Ergonomic keyboard or vertical mouse — helpful if you experience wrist or forearm discomfort.
  5. Monitor arm — fine-tunes monitor position and frees desk space.
  6. Footrest, wrist rest, cable management — low-cost finishing touches.

Pain Warning Signs — Seek Professional Help

Consult a medical or physiotherapy professional if you experience:

  • Persistent wrist, hand, or forearm pain, numbness, or tingling.
  • Neck or back pain that does not improve with setup changes.
  • Headaches that correlate with screen time and do not respond to breaks.
  • Any symptoms that worsen over time or interfere with sleep or daily activities.

Daily Quick Check (30 seconds)

Before starting work:

  1. Feet flat? Back supported?
  2. Screen at eye level? Arm's length away?
  3. Shoulders relaxed? Wrists straight?
  4. Next break planned?

Differentiation: Provides a structured six-checkpoint assessment with quick fixes and upgrade prioritization, not generic posture advice. Emphasizes movement as critical and includes clear guidance on when to seek professional help.

Source Transparency

This detail page is rendered from real SKILL.md content. Trust labels are metadata-based hints, not a safety guarantee.

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