Tech Neck

Margot Kim Image
Tuesday, January 26, 2016
Tech Neck
You call it ?checking my phone.? Chiropractors call it ?tech neck.?

ORLANDO, Fla. (KFSN) -- You call it 'checking my phone.' Chiropractors call it "tech neck." It's becoming a common reason for neck and back pain, but, there are ways to avoid health problems now and later in life.

Georgette Robinson is starting to realize that technology can be a real pain in the neck.

Robinson told Ivanhoe, "My shoulder area is really always hard. I always contributed it to stress, but apparently it's not stress, it's because my posture, I'm not sitting properly."

Tilting your head forward just 15 degrees puts an extra 15 pounds of pressure on your neck, and constantly repeating that is bad especially over time.

Steven Weiniger, DC, chiropractor and posture expert at BodyZone.com told Ivanhoe, "And as a result, that muscle imbalance puts more strain on the joints in the neck. Over time, that creates pressure on the nerves in the neck."

Weiniger says taking an annual posture photo can help you track it over time. He uses an app called "posture zone" to measure Kim Groves' alignment and show her where she needs improvement.

"Your torso is two degrees to the right of your feet. Your pelvis is almost three degrees to the right of your feet. So your body is pulling back and leaning a tad forward," he explained.

Kim Groves told Ivanhoe, "Hardly ever do I think about the way I'm sitting or how I'm answering the phone."

While back and neck aches remind Groves to pay better attention to her posture, Weiniger says that's only a good first step. Next change: your smartphone.

Weiniger said, "The best way to use your phone is sitting tall, head level, back toward over your shoulders, shoulders back and down, elbows into your side, phone up so you're looking straight ahead at it."

Other remedies for tech neck: stretch regularly and swap your chair for a medicine ball.

"Sitting well on a ball is great because it's unstable and makes you balance. I'm less crazy about a lot of the chairs that give you back support and no support under the bottom," Weiniger explained.

Better posture equals better health, especially as we age. A study in the "Journals of Gerontology" found that seniors with bad posture are more likely to fall and are 3.5 times more likely to lose their ability to feed, bathe or dress themselves.

For more information, contact:

Steven Weiniger, DC

weiniger@bodyzone.com