"Ergonomic Furniture Gains Importance
in Filmless Environment", (c) Leslie
K. Anderson, Health Imaging & IT,
September 1, 2007
When it comes to planning
radiology department needs, furniture
used to be on the bottom of the list.
Today, as more thought is given to
maximizing work space and providing
better ergonomic working solutions
that are flexible and more comfortable
for a variety of radiologists,
furniture has become an important
component of the planning stage.
The switch from a film-based
environment to a filmless environment
is driving many healthcare
organizations to rethink the workspace
and what goes into it. They are
recognizing the positive impact
well-designed space and furniture have
on workflow and productivity. Many are
choosing to not just hop along with
what’s left over from the days of
film, but rather are considering
furniture options during the same time
they are selecting PACS. Reading room
furniture is no longer an afterthought
— it’s an essential piece of the
planning puzzle.
Ensuring ergonomic solutions

Planning was a comprehensive
internal process that included
research and study at Montefiore
Medical Center in Bronx, N.Y. With two
hospitals, 60 radiologists and 14
reading rooms, there were many issues
to tackle and people to make
comfortable at their workstations.
“We looked at the ergonomic issues
regarding workstations. We had a
musculoskeletal radiologist, a rehab
spine doc, an architect and an
engineer all working together,” says
Nogah Haramati, MD, the hospital’s
chief of radiology and professor of
clinical radiology and surgery at
Albert Einstein College of Medicine.
They reviewed some 3,000 articles on
computer-based reading stations and
found that the chair was the most
important consideration. “We spent a
lot of time focusing on the chair and
the parameters related to the chair,”
he says and selected a Zoom ergonomic
model. Notable requirements include
the ability to adjust the arm rest and
the seat back, and it must have wheels
and be able to swivel.
Turning their attention to the table,
they worked closely with AFC
Industries over a nine-month period
testing a number of prototypes. Their
testing resulted in the development of
the AFC Ergo Tier workstations.
The facility began the switch to
digital imaging in 2002 and by August
of that year they were 80 percent
filmless, although they were still
working with a fairly traditional
reading environment. Over time they
transformed the reading rooms to all
have the same layout and AFC furniture
and partitions.
Balancing user, facility needs

The process of designing just the
right table meant balancing the needs
of the user with the needs of the
facility. “You have to pay a lot of
attention to user comfort. The real
secret of ergonomics is comfort. It’s
not about flashy looks,” Haramati
says. Much of that comfort comes in
the way of what is adjustable and the
shape of the desk. “We actually ended
up with a shallow curve which is what
the users preferred, so they could
rest their arms and have the keyboard
close and move the monitors,” he says.
Surface height, surface tilt, and
monitor position can change with the
touch of a button to easily
accommodate any clinician’s height.
“We also found some radiologists had
back pain and spinal problems and so
working in the sitting position might
not always be the best, so we wanted
an environment where the table could
be brought up and the user could
stand.
When a user stands, the tables would
have to be at one level for that user,
but the monitor would have to be in a
very different level, so even for the
same user, the monitor may have to be
raised and lowered. That’s why the
monitor and the tables need to be able
to move independently,” he says.
To meet facility needs, Haramati knows
the furniture must be able to move
since it’s common to relocate reading
rooms. “The tables are all on wheels,
the partitions are all
movable—everything is movable,” he
says. “Even when the hospital said
‘this is your reading room,’ we knew
that they would be moving us.”
He adds that being able to move the
furniture is based on being able to
get it out the door. His doorway is
32-inches wide and he had his table
made to be 24-inches wide, while
standard tables are 36-inches wide.
Knowing who is behind the
product

It is important to look beyond the
day-to-day furniture use and consider
what the needs are when something
stops working, Haramati says.
“These tables are all motorized, and
when you are dealing with 60 motorized
devices, some things stop working, and
you need to make sure your company,
whoever you buy from, has the
wherewithal that when you call them up
and you say, ‘hey something stopped,
it’s not working,’ that they can
either send you another, or send you
replacement parts and instructions, so
that one of your engineers can fix it
quickly so you don’t get downtime,” he
says.
Gaining status

Furniture is clearly becoming more
of a priority. Long work days looking
at imaging studies on monitors drives
the need for ergonomic comforts at
workstations. Facilities are
anticipating furniture needs in the
planning stages and vendors are coming
to the plate with attractive solutions
that offer flexibility and meet
needs.