Aureus Medical Group’s healthcare blog provides articles and information regarding careers in travel nursing, travel therapy, allied health and more.

Physical therapy PT: Sitting for hours can be harmful to health

Many of us spend hours sitting at the desk.

Travel physical therapy professionals see dozens of patients who spend hours sitting at work every day. Besides increasing risk of cardiovascular disease, sitting for too long is a common cause of lower back pain.

Even when employees make a note of good posture, they revert to hunching over their desk, placing increased stress on their spines. As those on travel assignments know, the spine is made up of 24 interlocking vertebrae. Ligaments, or fibrous tissue, connects those bones in our spine, and to prevent our vertebrae from crunching against each other, spinal discs act as a cushion between them. 

Although lifting heavy objects or excessive twisting and turning movement puts stress on the back, sitting completely still may cause our backs to ache as well. The lower back must prop up the weight of the top half of the body. 

In fact, around 8 out of 10 people suffer from either acute or chronic back pain, according to the National Institutes of Health. But it's not only the sedentary job. After work, many people come home and engage in more sedentary activities like watching television or sitting around a dinner table talking.

Chairs matter
Like a small shoe that creates blisters on your feet, a bad chair may spell trouble for your patient's back. The more of the stress load she displaces onto the chair, the less work her back muscles will have to do. 

Instruct your patients to get a chair that fits. Here are some rules to sit by:

Fight the 'chained to desk' feeling
To counteract sitting time, tell your patients to start getting in the habit of taking breaks. Here are some ways to do this: