An Investigation of the Incidences of Repetitive Strain Injury among computer Users in Nigeria
Olatunde Olabiyisi, Yusuff Akingboye, Adebayo Abayomi-Alli, Fred, Izilein, Iyiola Adeleke

TL;DR
This study investigates the high prevalence of Repetitive Strain Injury among Nigerian computer users, highlighting significant relationships between ergonomic factors, usage duration, and RSI incidence.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence on RSI prevalence and identifies key ergonomic and usage factors influencing RSI among diverse Nigerian computer users.
Findings
94.3% of respondents experienced pain in at least one body part
Significant correlations between computer usage duration and RSI
Linear regression shows increased computer use and ergonomic deficiencies raise RSI risk
Abstract
Computer has been incorporated into day to day activities of almost every field of human endeavour, offices to different shops. Therefore many people are now working with computer for longer hours of time. There is no doubt that this incorporation of computer has helped users a lot but it also brings problems to the users. One of the problems is Repetitive Strain Injury (RSI). Five hundred and thirty one (531) questionnaires were personally administered to different categories of people that use computer in various works of life, ranging from banking sector, civil service, educational sector, health sector to private sector. The distribution cut across different professions. A statistical analysis was conducted on the data obtained using frequency distribution, Pearson Correlation and Linear Regression. The result obtained showed that 94.3% of the respondents suffered pain from one or…
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Taxonomy
TopicsErgonomics and Musculoskeletal Disorders · Musculoskeletal pain and rehabilitation · Effects of Vibration on Health
