To My Cubicle and Office Warriors (well anyone in general)...How much do you sit?

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PITTSBURGH (NewsRadio 1020 KDKA) – The average worker spends over five hours and 40 minutes sitting at their job every day and a new  study says it’s bad for your health, with some claiming the long-term effects of sitting can be as bad as smoking.

Dr. Michael Jensen, from the Mayo Clinic, joined KDKA Radio’s Larry Richert and John Shumway to talk about a study he and his colleagues conducted.

To find out whether the test subjects in the study were sitting or not, Dr. Jensen says one of his colleagues, Dr. James Levine, invented underwear that can “tell whether you’re sitting, standing, or lying down essentially every half second of the day.”

With the data they gathered and studied, they came to the conclusion that people need to move around more. Dr. Jensen says they found, “that people who are overweight tend to spend a lot more time sitting then people who have not gained weight.”

Dr. Jensen says that a trip to the gym for 30 minutes or an hour may not be enough to combat all the time spent sitting.

“It’s not going to prevent risk for disease and weight gain if that’s all you do is go to the gym  for 30 minutes or an hour and spend all of the rest of your day sitting.”

According to Dr. Jensen, “sitting is independently associated with greater risk of dying of heart disease [and] diabetes, even when you try to account  for exercise.”

What is the solution to this? Dr. Jensen and his colleagues say that standing at work at least part of the time has positive health benefits .

The doctor admits, “that there certainly are people that have trouble with their legs, and it’s not going to be practical for them to be standing up a lot.” But he adds, “thankfully, most people can spend more time standing and not suffer from it.”

There are studies that claim prolonged sitting is responsible for 49,000 cases of breast cancer and 43,000 cases of colon cancer in the United States. Those are startling numbers, but Dr. Jensen says you should take some of those studies, “with a grain of salt.”

He says, “unlike the [study we] did where we objectively measured sitting, standing and walking, many of [the other studies] are self-report.”

A self-report relies a lot of the test subjects own reports.

He adds that the information  gathered in a self-report, “tends to be bias and [the subject] may overlook a number of things that go into [the cause]. For example, people who sit a lot may have a number of other unhealthy lifestyles that [makes] it impossible to take account for.”

The bottom line is that less time spent sitting at work may help you reduce the risk of certain diseases.

http://pittsburgh.cbslocal.com/2014/04/22/is-sitting-for-long-hours-at-work-the-new-smoking/

this probably also doesn't take into account commute times as well...

I'm trying to be more aware of how long i sit and do a lap around the office at least every 30 mins...also looking into standing desks for home use

or the DIY version 
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There's this one guy here that raises his desk all the way up and stands and works. Our desks are motorized
 
I read a similar study last year and since then make an effort to get up and walk at least 4 times a day which I'm sure isnt enough but my tabels too low and standing would be uncomfortable.
 
They need to create cubicle seats with vibrating pipes in the middle of the seat that stick 5 inches up.
I bet you that people will start standing more often
 
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They need to create cubicle seats with vibrating pipes in the middle of the seat that stick 5 inches up.
I bet you that people will start standing more often


What stuff are you on man, you say the wildest ****.
 
i tried setting a standing desk at work a while ago but it did not work 
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i sit right around from a corner...the cubes have privacy glass and when people turned the corner and saw me standing right there...people were like uhhh so unexpectedly, so i just went, sup? 
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Wow I thought I was safe by going to the gym everyday.
If standing up the entire time at a desk isn't an option, what other options do we have?
 
I be sitting in class all day and my angus and legs hurt so much by the end of the day

Idk if i can work a cubicle job
 
We retrofit stations like that all the time for our employees. It's a lot cheaper than a workers comp claim.

Reach out to your ergonomist or health and safety dept at work, dudes.

I personally get tired of sitting after a couple hours so I walk around to do audits and stuff.
 
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Wow I thought I was safe by going to the gym everyday.
If standing up the entire time at a desk isn't an option, what other options do we have?
Stretch breaks and walking sessions.

It's your employers responsibility to provide a comfortable work station. Laws differ base on the states but any reputable company will have a health and safety dept to come do an evaluation at the very least.
 
this is one of the many reasons why im changing careers.

Sitting and staring at a screen for 8+ hours a day is killing me.....slowly and softly.

My spine feels curved, my eyes are declining. This isnt natural.

Good post OP.
 
Yeah I'm sitting all day. I get so antsy and tired of it. On my 15s and my lunch break I used to go and drive the golf cart around (even though I'm still sitting lol). Now we have bikes so I'll get a bike ride in around the complex or walk into some of the buildings we have here and scope out all the pretty ladies and whatnot
 
im going to make a suggestion to add standing desks around the office just to shake things up...
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my boss will look at my like im crazy but its a win-win for everyone because they look better, making it seem they care about worker's health...
 
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this is one of the many reasons why im changing careers.

Sitting and staring at a screen for 8+ hours a day is killing me.....slowly and softly.

My spine feels curved, my eyes are declining. This isnt natural.

Good post OP.

ALLLLLL this

Back pain....eye strain....is real. I am 26 and i feel like a 75 year old at times. And i go to the gym 4 times a week and am active almost every day. I don't know why this isn't more of a concern or problem in corporate america. Like give everyone an option for a stand up desk. Or a tredmil desk...or ab-ball chairs....something.
 
ive never had a desk job in my life

very active an on top of that i go to the gym lots

metabolic rate is pretty legit long as you dont drink alcohol you can eat whatever you want as long as it fits in your macros

IIFYM............i eat whatever i want real life. srs

9-5 sitting down all day, my god......
 
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I did the desk thing and man the burning eyes and stiff limbs
 
Check if your place of employment has an employee health officer, or something similar in HR.

I had an ergonomic assessment, took the report to my admins, got a Herman Miller Aeron. 

Now if I could do something about these screens..
 
How Your Office is Killing You

http://www.cracked.com/article_18654_6-ways-your-office-literally-killing-you.html

4. Lighting

Have you ever walked into your office (or a shopping mall) and blinked because it was actually brighter in there than outside in the sunlight? That's due to an incredibly common problem called "over-illumination." That's basically any time artificial light is brighter than it needs to be to do a given task. And if your task is sitting at a computer all day, the chances are you don't need your surroundings to be brighter than your computer screen or, say, the surface of the sun.

We assume you don't sit at home with your laptop under a police spotlight so why do you need to feel like that at work? The answer is you don't, and moreover the over-illumination is making you feel like crap.

If you come home from work most days with a headache it might not be due to the stench of microwave popcorn and the lite rock on the muzak. It might simply come down to the lighting. Almost all office buildings built before the mid-1990s are designed to be too bright, possibly because architects wanted to make sure people could really see the exquisite detail on your piano key necktie.

The use of florescent lights and/or over-illumination can cause health concerns including headache, fatigue, stress, anxiety, cardiovascular disease and, wait for it, erectile dysfunction.

That's right, not only could those annoying lights that eventually start blinking and buzzing yet maintenance never changes them no matter how many times you ask give you a heart attack, but they could also affect your performance in bed. Which will in turn add to your stress level making it a vicious, deadly cycle.

Apparently this happens because our bodies are designed to respond to sunlight. Anything brighter than that our bodies don't really understand so for some reason they decide to react as if we're in total darkness. This in turn messes up our natural sleep cycle, leading to a myriad of health problems. All because of some stupid light bulbs.
eye strain....is real.
 
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