Protecting Your Hands and Wrists While Working from Home

Common causes include:

Common causes include:

Repetitive motion (typing, clicking)

Poor wrist positioning while using keyboard or mouse

Unsupported forearms during long periods of desk work

Excessive tension from gripping a mouse or typing too hard

Lack of breaks and movement

These repetitive stresses can irritate tendons, compress nerves, and reduce circulation to the wrist and hand.

?? Simple Tips to Prevent Wrist and Hand Injuries

??? 1. Set Up Your Desk Ergonomically

Proper wrist position starts with a healthy setup.

? Key ergonomic cues:

Keyboard and mouse at elbow height

Wrists straight and flat—not bent up or down

Forearms parallel to the ground

Elbows at 90–100 degrees, close to the body

Use a keyboard tray or wrist rest if needed

Avoid resting your wrists on a hard edge—this compresses the carpal tunnel.

??? 2. Use Ergonomic Tools

Your input devices matter more than you think.

?? Consider:

Split or tented keyboard to reduce wrist ulnar deviation

Vertical or ergonomic mouse to keep wrist in neutral position

Trackball mouse to reduce wrist movement

Mouse pad with gel support for comfort

Small changes can significantly reduce strain during long work hours.

?? 3. Adjust Your Typing Technique

Typing too hard or with poor alignment stresses your hands.

? Healthy habits:

Float your wrists—don’t rest them while typing

Use light, even keystrokes

Keep hands relaxed, not tense or clawed

Shorten keyboard shortcuts to reduce repetitive reaching

Good technique = better hand health over time.

?? 4. Stretch and Move Regularly

Motion is lotion—especially for tendons and joints.

? Every 30–60 minutes:

Shake out your hands

Gently stretch wrists and fingers

Do a few wrist circles or flexion/extension movements

????? 5. Physiotherapy-Inspired Hand and Wrist Exercises

These simple moves improve circulation, mobility, and strength.

?? Wrist Flexor Stretch

Extend one arm forward, palm up

Gently pull back on fingers with other hand

? Hold 15–30 seconds, each side

?? Wrist Extensor Stretch

Extend arm, palm down

Pull back gently on top of hand

? Hold 15–30 seconds, each side

?? Tendon Gliding Exercise

Start with fingers extended

Curl to hook fist, then full fist, then straight fist

?? Repeat 5–10 times

?? Wrist Circles

Make fists and rotate both wrists slowly

?? 10 circles each direction

?? Grip Strengthening

Use a soft stress ball or therapy putty

?? Squeeze gently for 5–10 seconds, repeat 10 times

? 6. Take Frequent Breaks

Don’t wait until your hands hurt—micro-breaks prevent overuse.

Try:

The Pomodoro method (25 min work / 5 min break)

Stand up, shake out your hands

Use voice-to-text or dictation tools for breaks from typing

Rest is as important as ergonomics.

? Quick Summary: Protect Your Hands & Wrists

Tip Benefit

Neutral wrist position Reduces nerve compression

Ergonomic devices Supports natural alignment

Light typing + relaxed grip Prevents muscle fatigue

Frequent stretches Keeps tendons mobile

Strengthening exercises Builds resilience

Regular breaks Prevents cumulative strain

????? Final Thought

Your hands and wrists are essential to your work—and your life. Protecting them means being intentional with how you sit, type, and move. A few daily changes can mean the difference between daily comfort and chronic pain.

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