home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
Info-Mac 3
/
Info_Mac_1994-01.iso
/
Periodical
/
General
/
RSI Network Newsletter Archive
/
RSI.Network4.etx
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1993-01-02
|
9KB
|
221 lines
RSInetwork#4/December 91
========================
For People Concerned About Tendinitis, Carpal Tunnel Syndrome, and
Other Repetitive Strain Injuries
Produced by:
Caroline Rose, 970 Paradise Way, Palo Alto CA 94306
(crose@applelink.apple.com)
Apple Computer is in no way affiliated with this newsletter.
This document is in setext (structure-enhanced text) format.
To index, browse, and copy from collected setext documents,
use Easy View, written by M. Akif Eyler, Bilkent University,
06533 Ankara, Turkey
(eyler@trbilun.bitnet).
Setext formatting by:
Craig O'Donnell, Assistant Sysop, MacWEEK Forum on ZiffNet
(72511.240@compuserve.com).
Other issues of RSInetwork are available through ZiffNet/Mac
and Compuserve, in the "Reference" file library at location
ZMC:DOWNTECH. Easy View is in the "Applications" library at
the same location under filename EASYVW.SEA.
National Attention!
-------------------
The November issue of PC World magazine included an article on
wrist supports and whether they could prevent carpal tunnel
syndrome (it seems a lot of articles mention CTS but not RSI in
general). Anyway, the author had phoned me when doing her
research, and as a result my name appeared at the end of the
article, as the publisher of an RSI newsletter. I consequently got
calls from a dozen or so people from various parts of the U.S.
(including Puerto Rico!) I sent each of them some back issues and
a cover letter explaining just how informal this newsletter is.
[Note: Carolyn wishes to shift newsletter distribution to
electronic networks and Email. Please help pass it on electronically
and write Caroline if you could help distribute it on paper.
--Craig O'Donnell, 12/29/92.]
I'm happy to be the central point from which the information is
disseminated but it can't all originate from me alone. Please
consider contributing not only money but also your questions,
stories, and any information that may be of interest to people
with RSI. We're all in this together."
To emphasize this point that I keep making about our being a
network of people with or concerned about RSI, for whom I am only
the messenger, I've renamed the newsletter accordingly. Remember
to send your contributions to me at crose@applelink.apple.com on
the Internet or to Caroline Rose, 970 Paradise Way, Palo Alto CA
94306 [please send them on disk if humanly possible].
Incidentally, most of those who called ended up not subscribing,
perhaps due to the local flavor of the newsletter. But we did get
a couple of grateful new subscribers, from as far east as my home
town of New York City. Welcome, outlanders!
Trigger Release Surgery: Update
-------------------------------
As noted in Issue 3, Marjie Hempstead would be happy to talk to
you about her recent trigger release surgery - but please do not
call her at work. You can call her at home at (415)961-9860.
Software of Interest
--------------------
In the first newsletter, I listed two word completion programs
that can save you keystrokes. Now there's a really hot phrase
completion program called Screen Doors that's recently become
available. It's very smart about what you're going to type - it
guesses phrases, not just the next word. Unlike some other similar
programs, it requires you to type into its own text area and then
copy the text out of there into where you ultimately want it; but
you may find that the savings in keystrokes is worth this
inconvenience. The product is made by Madenta in Canada, (403)450-
8926, and distributed by Prentke-Romich, 800-262-1984.
Good news for Macintosh users of the Curtis trackball with foot
pedal: An update is available that will allow the foot pedal to
work with System 7. Just call (603)532-4123 (New Hampshire), ask
for Customer Service, and say that you need the version 1.01
update.
Ergonomic Resources
-------------------
In the last issue under this heading, I mentioned a professional
ergonomist whom I'd spoken with. Since then, some of you have
asked for his name, and he has asked to be listed as a resource.
So he shall remain unnamed no longer: he's Tom Signore, he works
at Raychem in Menlo Park, and his work number is (415)361-2983. He
has written an excellent 18-page "white paper" entitled "Computing
Ergonomics: Repetitive Strain and Computer Use," which includes a
two-page summary of state and city legislation related to the
ergonomics of using a computer, and also a list of the ANSI VDT
standard guidelines.
Another ergonomic resource that's been highly recommended is a
store in Oakland called Back Designs, (510)451-6600.
Publications
------------
Cumulative Trauma Disorders
by Vern Putz-Anderson
California Workers' Compensation Handbook
by Stanford D. Hulick
Pain: Free Yourself for Life
Dr. David Corey with Stan Solomon
The Deadly Diet
by Terrence Sandbek. Oriented toward people with
eating disorders but full of good advice for anyone whose
condition might be getting (and keeping) them down.
• The following are three well-illustrated 16-page booklets by
Krames Communications, Daly City CA, (415)994-8800. I picked these
up at the office of one of Stanford Hospital's physical
therapists:
Preventing Repetitive Motion Injuries: Working Smart with Your
Hand and Arm Hand
Wrist Owner's Manual: A Guide to Hand and Wrist Injuries
Carpal Tunnel Syndrome: Relieving the Pressure in Your Wrist
Letters From Readers
--------------------
Any Luck With Rheumatologists?
Jennifer Ovink of Oregon would like to know if anyone out there
has had experience with rheumatologists and what help there was,
if any. If you respond to this newsletter, I'll print it; you can
also try reaching Jennifer on the Internet at
symbio!jennifer@cs.orst.edu.
My doctor (a physiatrist) recommended that I see the head of the
Department of Rheumatology at Stanford Hospital, for a second
opinion. It was pretty quickly determined that I don't have a
rheumatological problem (I have tendinitis in my forearms).
Long-term Disability?
---------------------
A couple of readers have asked for more information about my
long-term disability payments and how I happened to get them. So
I'll give a few more details (but remember, policies vary widely).
When I got tendinitis at the last company I worked for, they
assigned a temp to type for me, but eventually decided they
couldn't continue doing that, which meant I could no longer do
that job. No other job that I could do turned up at that company,
so I went on short-term disability for two months, after which I
filed for long-term disability and resigned (in that order; you
must file while still employed at the company where you contracted
the RSI). I was fortunate to immediately get a job elsewhere,
requiring less typing (and earning less pay). The formula the
long-term disability insurance company used to determine my
payments is more complicated than I would ever attempt to
understand, so I can't explain the amount, but I will get $1250 a
month, taxable, for two years. I needed lots of encouragement to
pursue this avenue, since it seemed a long shot and
bureaucratically complex, but it paid off; I hope this will
encourage you to look into what coverage you may have, and to fill
out the endless paperwork no matter how small your chances may
seem.
Quote Of The Month
------------------
"It's really a wonderfully exotic name for writer's cramp." -
Alexandra Ripley, author of Scarlett (the sequel to Gone With the
Wind), who wrote the manuscript for the 823-page book in longhand
and signed more than 10,000 copies of it. Quoted in the New York
Times. She is suffering from tendinitis and carpal tunnel
syndrome.
Let's see how wonderfully exotic she thinks it is a year or so
from now. I think she's got a hard lesson to learn.
RSI Support Groups
------------------
San Francisco:
Judy Doane, (415)931-8780, or Yari Leski, (415)759-0140.
Alternate Mondays, 7:30 PM, at the California Pacific Medical
Center (3773 Sacramento St., at Maple, SF), rooms G and H.
1/18/93: Ilana Parker, physical therapist specializing in the
Feldenkrais method
1/4/93 and 2/1/93: no speaker, general support meeting.
East Bay:
Joan Lichterman, (510)653-1802.
Meets monthly, 7 to 9 PM, usually on the second Wednesday, at
CalARM 400 29th Street, #105 (at summit), Oakland.
1/8/93: Glen Kohler, Using Tai Chi to Prevent RSIs
North Bay:
Stephanie Barnes, (707)571-0397.
Tuesday evenings in Santa Rosa, 7 to 9 PM, Round Table Pizza 550
Montecito Blvd., between Middle Rincon and Mission Blvd.
South Bay:
Pat Roggy, (408)297-8725, or Petzoldt Hand Center, (408)261-
7660.
Los Angeles area:
Samantha Greenberg, (213)207-1653.
A "computer injury network".
..