Current:Home > MyGot neck and back pain? Break up your work day with these 5 exercises for relief -MoneyFlow Academy
Got neck and back pain? Break up your work day with these 5 exercises for relief
View
Date:2025-04-14 23:37:33
After staring at a computer screen for hours at a time, the body often gives us a clue that it is stressed: nagging neck and back pain.
To fix the problem, you might have gotten advice to focus on posture or ergonomics, but exercise research points to another strategy as well – taking short spurts of movement throughout the day to release tension and stress in the body.
"As a society, the assumption is that we have pain because of poor posture and slouching," says Kieran O'Sullivan, an associate professor of physiotherapy at the University of Limerick's School of Allied Health in Ireland. "But [the issue] isn't as neat and tidy as we thought. We have been trying all these fixes [with ergonomics] and it has arguably not fixed the problem. I think it is more about needing breaks from the working day with ... movement."
Here's how researchers think quick hits of movement – sometimes called exercise "snacks" – may help prevent pain. When the brain senses physical or emotional stress, the body releases hormones that trigger muscles to become guarded and tight. Exercise counters that stress response by increasing blood flow to muscles, tendons and ligaments and sending nutrients to the spine's joints and discs.
Fitness specialists at NASA, an agency where people work in high-stress seated positions, developed a set of 20 one-minute exercises to prevent pain that anyone can do at their desk. We've chosen five here for you to try.
Movement is also hydrating for connective tissues and joints, reversing the stiffening that arises with too much sedentary behavior, says Dr. Helene Langevin, director of the National Institute of Health's National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health, which recently funded more than a half-dozen studies on connective tissue and pain.
"Taking small breaks and moving around throughout the day...prevents your body from 'congealing,'" Langevin says.
Movement snacks can also have broader health benefits. Brief bouts of movement, from gentle to vigorous, repeated several times a day, can improve cardiovascular health, halt muscle loss, reduce all-cause mortality, and reduce stress, physiology and movement experts say, citing a growing body of medical studies.
Stretch, flex or even fidget
Any kind of movement works – from yoga poses to walking briskly around the room or running up several flights of stairs.
The NASA program included seated marches, standing calf raises, push-ups with hands on the desk, standing leg curls and neck, shoulder, and back stretches.
"Your body is always talking to you," said Marceleus M. Venable, a personal trainer in Washington D.C.. and co-author of the NASA exercise program. "Your hands cramp, you have hip pain and neck pain ... it's saying: 'hey, can you stretch me?'
No one set of exercises works for every body. Rather, people should focus on movements that challenge areas of weakness, strengthen multiple parts of the body at once and that they enjoy, says Katy Bowman, a Carlsborg, Wash., biomechanist and author of the book Move Your DNA.
"It's not as simple as, everyone with back pain, do these four [abdominal] moves," says Bowman. "It's just like dietary nutrition. Just as you need a spectrum of dietary nutrients, you need a spectrum of movements that make the body strong from head to toe."
Bowman advises setting a timer for every half hour or hour, and then doing anything you can to change up the positioning of the body. Make movements that will vary loads placed on the spine and muscles. For example, if you had your hands at the keyboard for a while, take a minute to reach the arms over the head and stretch. Then stand up and take the spine through its ranges of motion: forward and back, side to side and rotations left to right.
"I'm a big advocate of fidgeting," she says. "Keep repositioning yourself — you can't really sit and not move for hours and hours a day and expect your body to be happy with that."
Active breaks may help with pain
A large-scale study of Denmark's workforce health promotion programs found those who took activity breaks, compared to those who did nothing, were less likely to need multiple sick days from illness and pain.
Many of the employees in the study, including office workers, used elastic resistance bands for 10-minute exercise breaks, three times a week. They did exercises like placing the bands between the hands, pulling the arms open, and squeezing the shoulders together. Employees could take breaks using the bands at their desk or gather with co-workers to exercise together.
Stretching resistance bands apart with your hands can counter the slouching, forward motion of the neck and shoulders when working at a computer. It can also help with muscle fatigue from sitting at a desk for long periods by strengthening back muscles, says Lars L. Andersen, a professor of musculoskeletal disorders at Denmark's National Research Centre for the Working Environment and lead author of the study.
The study demonstrated that "active breaks are good for the body and the mind and help with pain," says Andersen.
The NIH's Langevin is a fan of using yoga stretches for movement snacks because they help to maintain the flexibility of connective tissue. Gentle movement from the practice can also encourage the body to relax and reduces the risk of aggravating back pain.
In July 2020, the NIH published a video of Langevin demonstrating some of the movements she recommends, including taking one arm in a large gentle circle, while stretching the neck in the opposite direction and then repeating the move in the opposite direction, and on the opposite side.
Even if you are feeling sore, gentle motion can be soothing. "For musculoskeletal pain in general, movement is a really good thing," she says.
The exercises and captions included are adapted from NASA's DeskFit program, created by the NASA Headquarters Fitness Center team, Tanya Johnson, Marceleus Venable, and Kimber Williams.
Bara Vaida is a Washington, D.C.-based freelance health care journalist and a yoga teacher.
veryGood! (487)
Related
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Jeffrey Foskett, longtime Beach Boys musician and Brian Wilson collaborator, dies at 67
- Giants offered comparable $700M deal to Shohei Ohtani as the Dodgers
- Oprah Winfrey reveals she uses weight-loss medication
- 'Squid Game' without subtitles? Duolingo, Netflix encourage fans to learn Korean
- 1 Marine killed, 14 taken to hospitals after amphibious combat vehicle rolls over during training
- Heard at UN climate talks: Quotes that tell the story
- Wartime Palestinian poll shows surge in Hamas support, close to 90% want US-backed Abbas to resign
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- Mega Millions winning numbers for December 12 drawing: Jackpot at $20 million after big win
Ranking
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- Court upholds judge’s ruling ordering new election in Louisiana sheriff’s race decided by one vote
- Florida school board approves resolution calling for Bridget Ziegler to resign over Republican sex scandal
- LeBron James says “moment was everything” seeing son Bronny’s debut for Southern Cal
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Why Sydney Sweeney's Wedding Planning With Fiancé Jonathan Davino Is on the Back Burner
- Tennessee audit says state prisons mishandled sexual assault cases. Here's why the problem could worsen
- Woman suing over Kentucky abortion ban learns her embryo no longer has cardiac activity
Recommendation
'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
Fed holds rates steady as inflation eases, forecasts 3 cuts in 2024
Wisconsin schools superintendent wants UW regents to delay vote on deal to limit diversity positions
SmileDirectClub is shutting down. Where does that leave its customers?
All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
Who is Las Vegas Raiders' starting QB? Aidan O'Connell could give way to Brian Hoyer
Saudi registrants for COP28 included undeclared oil company employees, nonprofit says
Will we ever learn who won the $1.76 billion Powerball jackpot in California? Here's what we know