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CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME
LINKED TO COMPUTER WORK, USUAL SUSPECT Corpus Christi, TX – A
new report on carpal tunnel syndrome from the Work Loss Data Institute (WLDI)
shows prevalence of CTS increases by almost 60% (56.77%) in data entry/typing
positions. Furthermore, as a
group, administrative and clerical workers demonstrate alarmingly high
prevalence of CTS compared to that of the general population. The WLDI report is based
on the most recent available data (1999) from the National Health Interview
Survey, the principal source of information on the health of the civilian,
non-institutionalized population of the United States and one of the major
data collection programs of CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics.
The NHIS also serves as the foundation for Official Disability
Guidelines. These statistics are
contrary to some recently published material including the findings of a Mayo
Clinic study that offer no correlation between computer work and CTS, but may
be more in line with the experience and intuition of employers and healthcare
providers wary of today’s keyboard-littered working environments.
The WLDI report sites differences in sample size, which approaches
100,000 in their report, and in diagnostic criteria as possible reasons for
the disparity. The report reaffirms the
expectations common of disability managers concerning the discrepancy in CTS
rates across gender. CTS
rates among adult females were exactly twice that of adult males. Females with CTS also show a higher absence rate and longer
disability duration than those of their male counterparts.
The most intriguing and
probably most valuable of the report’s many distinctions is the distribution
of CTS data with respect to age. From
the age bracket (18-24), low CTS rates and disability durations increase with
age, as expected. But this
behavior is transitory, as they actually peak at middle age. In fact, average CTS disability durations reach their lower
bound in the (65-74) age demographic, and the corresponding CTS rate is just
half of its upper bound, occurring in the middle age bracket (45-54).
This information is welcomed in light of growing concerns regarding the
aging workforce, increased demand for computer work and uncertainty in the
future of Social Security. The WLDI special report, entitled Carpal Tunnel Syndrome (CTS): Determinants of Return-to-Work, addresses the overall prevalence and duration of CTS as well as the impacts of occupation, gender, age, race/ethnicity, and co-morbidities on the prevalence and duration of CTS. Also covered is the outcome and prevalence of different types of therapy on CTS duration. Work Loss Data Institute
is an independent database developer focused on workplace health and
productivity, and publisher of Official Disability Guidelines and Employer
Health Register. To purchase Carpal
Tunnel Syndrome (CTS): Determinants of Return-to-Work ($50, available in
electronic and hardcopy formats) visit www.disabilitydurations.com/specreportorder.htm,
or contact us at 800 488-5548.
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