Corporate

Corporate

The Office Vs Health

" Sitting at the office can create constant muscle tightness along the spine leading to aching shoulders, neck, lower back and thighs. Headaches and intermittent pins and needles within certain fingers at night can be experienced and pain killers seem to only give temporary relief." 

Sound Familiar?
 
What we do during our daily lifestyle habits including our job and physical recreational activities matters. 

More studies are showing that occupations that involve prolonged sitting have a high incidence of lower back pain as it is estimated that on average, adults generally spend up to as much as six to eight hours, or 45-50% of our waking hours in one day in a seated position. 

 Studies have found that individuals who spend long periods of time sitting, especially in a slumped posture and suddenly go on to perform demanding, heavy lifting activities afterwards are at a greater risk of a hyperflexion injury which can cause ligamentous strains and disc related injury. For example, if a lorry driver, gardener, courier or warehouse shipper should sit for long hours and are suddenly required to unload a truck, it is strongly advised to stand and gently move the body via walking or gentle exercise for a few minutes prior to performing demanding manual exertions to avoid unnecessary injury.

More can be read by clicking on the button below: 
Blog Post

 

Diet & Lifestyle


One is probably sick of the term "we are what we eat", but a realistic day-to-day organised and sustainable diet regime with high nutritious foods is also incredibly important, if not, the most important. A sustainable healthy diet with a physically active lifestyle can help determine our mood, sleep patterns, alertness, cognition, energy levels, personality and memory.


The 'New' Lifestyle Programme

A short period of strict diet regimes with a regular personal training program might reportedly help reduce an individual's weight and tone their pre-office-bound muscles, which is impressive. But a question to consider for the long term is; is this new found lifestyle sustainable? Would you be able to keep up with the new lifestyle for 10 to 11 months of the year on a day-to-day basis? 


The NHS physical activity guidelines for adults aged 19 to 64 years old is:


  • To perform 150 minutes (or 5 x 30 minutes) of moderate intensity of activity a week e.g. cycling, walking, swimming, jogging (slow run), aqua aerobics.

Or

  • 75 minutes of vigorous intensity of activity a week. This is approximately an hour and a half of your systolic blood pressure rising to between 160 to 220 mmHg during exercise i.e. the exercise makes you sweat e.g. boxing, running, sprinting, FIIT, circuit training.


Simple example questions to ask yourself to commit to a healthier diet are: 

- Can you honestly say what your meals (breakfast/ lunch/ dinner) are likely to be within the next 5 days and are they organised meals containing nutritious foods? 

- What snacks in between meals are you likely to have to keep yourself going during the day for the next 5 days? If 5 days seems to daunting, think about what they could be for the next 2 days. Then 2 days after that.

- Do you drink enough water for your day-to-day lifestyle? Can you cut down the number or caffeine or fizzy drinks?

- Do you have too many take-outs? Is there any way to cut the number down and swap them for a nutritious healthy meal?

- Have you tried spending a full afternoon cooking different nutritious meals? Make sure that the experience is enjoyable and could you carry meals over to the following day/ week and plan meals ahead?


Another way to think about lifestyle is: each daily dietary intake and exercise activity counts up to an overall long term result both physically and mentally that will have an impact for the following months and years.


Which lifestyle decisions and the paths you choose can only be made by you.

Office Workers' Health Stats and Facts

  • According to the Economic Evidence Report (2016), sickness absence costs UK businesses an estimated £29bn each year. 
  • The average worker takes 6.6 days off each year due to sickness.
  •  An average London firm of 250 employees loses around £250,000 a year due to ill health.
  • The productivity loss as a direct cost of cardiovascular disease is £8 billion per year.
  • Average absence has increased most in the public sector where it is now 50% higher than in the private sector.
  • The level of absence across the UK also tends to be higher in larger organisations, regardless of sector, and on average manual workers have 1.5 more day absence per year than non-manual workers.

Strategies & Plans

At the Leagrave Therapy clinic we take a detailed case history before performing an assessment which includes a posture and gait cycle check, an ergonomic check and clinical testing. Treatment may involve an ergonomic check along with lifestyle advise, exercise programmed and hands-on physical therapy.  

Every customer is unique. That’s why we customise every one of our plans to fit your needs exactly. Whether it’s a small strategy or a comprehensive effort, we’ll sit down with you, listen to your requests and prepare a customised plan. 
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If you New paragraphiIIfIUHealHealth insurances are accepted

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