Stress, contorted positions, and repetitive motions can combine to cause fibromyalgia flare-ups—but there are ways to prevent your job from making you feel worse.
"When you have fibromyalgia and you’re in the workplace, you need to be aware of what bothers you," says Barbara L. Kornblau, president of the American Occupational Therapy Association.
Kornblau, who has FM, recommends keeping a diary for about a week. Record what you are doing and how you feel every 15 minutes or so. At the end of the week, that document will show you what time of day you’re in the most pain, which day of the week is the most stressful, and which activities are the most uncomfortable for you.
With that knowledge, you can approach your boss with a request for accommodation, or turn to an occupational therapist or ergonomic consultant for advice.
It can be difficult to request special equipment—and it can be a challenge to make a worker’s compensation claim. Laws vary from state to state, but the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) generally prohibits discrimination against qualified individuals with disabilities, and requires the workplace to make reasonable accommodations for them (unless the accommodation would cause undue hardship to the business). Kornblau notes, however, that the courts have so far mainly restricted the ADA to apply to people with sight, hearing, or ambulatory disabilities.
The good news for workers with FM is that, much of the time, the accommodations they need to feel more comfortable on the job are inexpensive and easy to implement.
"Usually when I do ergonomic accommodations, [they cost] around the $500 mark," says vocational counselor Dr. June Hagen. "That’s certainly reasonable for the employer."
Sometimes accommodations cost even less. Hagen has purchased $40 office chairs ideally suited for her clients’ needs. Kornblau was able to help an airline employee reduce her severe neck spasms simply by rearranging her desk so her computer monitor was not off to the side.
Here are some pointers to make your workday a less painful experience:
Sometimes it’s difficult for a person to see how his workplace could be adapted. That’s where an ergonomic evaluation or a consultation with an occupational therapist can really help. "We look at things differently," says Kornblau. "Occupational therapists look at how we can do things differently to enable the person to participate fully in the things you need to do."
Whether you need to rearrange your schedule, buy an ergonomic keyboard, or move your office furniture, take control of your workday and make your workspace work for you—not against you!
For more information about making the workplace a friendlier place, check out these sites: