Ergonomics includes the design of workplaces and work tools that people can easily, efficiently and effectively use. The overall goal is to improve workplace health and productivity. If ergonomics is not used, chronic musculoskeletal disorders such as tendinitis of the arm and hand, eye injury, back injury etc. are common. Most people are concerned that they can not use certain parts of the body, as they know they should be able to use them. People do not know how to prevent injuries, and ergonomics will introduce ways to help reduce injuries.
Examples of scientific and artistic cross-paths are ergonomics and artistic therapy. Ergonomics includes the use of designs to shape products that promote spiritual and physical health. Ergonomic chair, ergonomic keyboard etc - They are the result of the fusion of science and art. Art therapy teaches patients to express themselves through art such as painting and sculpture. By doing so, you can create various health benefits such as mood regulation and more attention. In industrial design, you can see that art and science are mixed, but products need to be carefully designed
Hundreds of millions of people work in the office all over the world. Improving the quality of these environments with user-centered design will bring great health, social and economic benefits to society. Office ergonomics provides an arbitrary framework for integrating massive research on the design of office work environments to optimize the health, safety, comfort and effectiveness of human occupants. (Jay L. Brand 2009) To demonstrate this possibility, at least 2% of the US labor force is suffering work-related musculoskeletal disorder (WRMSD) every year (Jay L. Brand 2009 is Faucett et al Adapted from 2002). In the European Union (EU), work-related musculoskeletal disorders (cumulative traumatic injury) constitute 40 to 50% of this disease (Drury et al., Jay L. Brand, P. h.D. (2009)).