STRAIN YOUR PASTA, NOT YOUR BACK
CHIROPRACTIC EXPERT OFFERS TIPS
TO AVOID BACK AND NECK PAIN
DUE TO EVERYDAY KITCHEN ACTIVITIES
The kitchen is often described as “hardest-working room in the house,” and it is where one’s back can work the hardest as well. According to Dr. William Madosky of Madosky Chiropractic and Acupuncture Center in St. Louis, poorly designed kitchen and the way we work and move within them – standing, sitting and bending – can lead to back and neck pain.
Whether one prepares food like a gourmet chef or a short-order cook, a lot of time is spent in the kitchen today – putting away groceries, creating meals, cleaning up and taking out the trash, not to mention socializing. “Most people think it’s that one wrong move that threw out their back, when it is really an accumulation of poor body mechanics in everyday activities,” advises Madosky. “All that time we are spending in the kitchen can take it’s toll on the spine.”
The problem with older kitchens is that they were not only designed simply for cooking, storing and cleaning, but also for people who were shorter than an average person is today. Bending forward over a sink or countertop that is too low can place undue stress on the neck and back. Fortunately today’s kitchen designs call for higher countertops (a good countertop height is ____ inches).
To decrease the risk of back and neck pain brought about by everyday kitchen duties, Madosky suggests the following tactics:
For people with chronic back pain, Madosky suggests designing the kitchen as though wheelchair access was needed. In such kitchens, cabinet and stove heights are built lower, and access to cabinets is easier. This design is useful to people who have difficulty standing for long periods of time.
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