Real-Time Postural Feedback to Optimize Ergonomics and Musculoskeletal Health in Ophthalmology Residents: A Canadian Pilot Quality Improvement Study
Matt Bolis, Anubhav Garg, Brian Chan

TL;DR
A wearable posture trainer improved short-term posture and reduced musculoskeletal pain in ophthalmology residents, but long-term effects were less consistent.
Contribution
This is the first pilot study to evaluate a wearable posture trainer's impact on ergonomics and musculoskeletal health in ophthalmology residents.
Findings
Residents improved upright posture time from 68.9% to 78.5% with real-time feedback.
MSK pain scores decreased to their lowest at long-term follow-up, averaging 3.5.
Long-term posture retention declined to 52.4% without continued feedback.
Abstract
Background Musculoskeletal (MSK) pain is a common occupational concern in ophthalmology, often associated with the sustained and ergonomically demanding positions required during clinical and surgical activities. Tasks such as slit-lamp examinations, indirect ophthalmoscopy, and microscope-assisted procedures may contribute to postural strain. Despite this, ergonomics remains an underemphasized component of resident education, even though physical strain during training can influence long-term clinical performance and physician well-being. This pilot study investigates whether the UPRIGHT GO 2, a wearable posture trainer, can improve posture and reduce MSK pain in ophthalmology residents. Methodology This prospective, interventional, proof-of-concept case series recruited five postgraduate year (PGY) 2 to 5 ophthalmology residents at McMaster University. Each participant wore the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMusculoskeletal pain and rehabilitation · Occupational health in dentistry · Ophthalmology and Visual Health Research
