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Office Chairs: Casters Galore

By: Fabian Toulouse

The development of the modern office chair did not begin, surprisingly, until the beginning of the 1860s. This was when businessmen, as businesses began to consolidate, spent a large amount of time trying to figure out how they could improve these chairs. Their main objective was to improve the efficiency of their office staff. The revolutionary idea of putting casters on the bottom of these chairs allowing the staff to glide from one work station to another. Keeping them in their seats, it was thought, meant keeping them working.
Far from altruistic intentions, making office furniture more comfortable was an incentive to make employees sit and work longer. Indeed as anyone who has had the displeasure of sitting on a bare, wooden chair for more than 30 minutes can attest, padding the seat is a great boon to keeping people firmly planted in their seats. As office furniture was encased in more padding and upholstered with fine leathers, the more imperative it became to take body mechanics into consideration.
The impact of ergonomics throughout the last century, culminating in the body-friendly designs of the mid to late 1970s, has produced a modern office chair that is phenomenally adjustable. Most modern office chairs can be adjusted to fit any employee, ensuring hours and hours of blissful productivity. Unfortunately, these accommodations have not done away with work and repetition-related strains to the shoulders, neck, back, and wrists. Ergonomic specialists recommend standing and stretching once every half hour.
However unfeasible, many people believe business owners would love to keep employees in their chairs eight hours a day. In today's society this would be considered above and beyond the call of duty, perhaps even criminal. The chair has come a long way in the last 150 years. The chair is a status symbol. The better chairs with all the latest in comfort and flexibility are the ones the bosses get. They have the high comfortable backs and the arms that are padded and plumped. The chairs with all the comforts of their recliner at home are the ones reserved for managers and vice-presidents who, indeed, spend a great deal of time in the seated position.
Somehow this just does not seem right. It would stand to reason that the people that spend the most time in the office chairs working should have the most comfortable ones. The emphasis is on working as there are many people who could spend hours a day in these chairs. The only question is are they really as busy as they look. Working 8 and 10 hours a day from these chairs whether it is answering phones, data processing, bookkeeping or whatever job they perform, the comfort level of these workers should be taken into consideration first. The best office chairs should go to those who need them the most.

Article Source: http://www.articlegoldmine.com

If you're interested in purchasing comfortable office chairs, make sure you buy from a respected vendor of office chairs.

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