
Office Ergonomics is often thought of by the average person as something purely structural: good furniture, adjustable desks, supportive chairs, etc. That’s all important, but a deep body of research confirms how employee behaviors play a controlling role in how workstation setups can promote comfort, prevent injury, and boost productivity long term.
In fact, when we think it through, behaviors are the mechanism by which design produces outcomes.
When an employee is fortunate enough to have the personal attention of an ergonomist or safety specialist, the professional’s deep training and experience will result in an optimal fit of the employee and their workstation including personally instructed guidance on how to use it properly (behavior). Unfortunately, we cannot realistically hire enough ergonomists to visit with every single employee.
Safety professionals clearly understand how, by the time an employee finally seeks assistance for discomfort, the root causes have been festering, long before the assistance request, while increasingly degrading comfort, health and productivity over time.
Beyond physical discomfort, unnecessary injury and unnecessarily degraded productivity, major studies over the past few years from pristine authorities have all identified and confirmed serious health risks from extended static postures.
Summarizing the latest conclusive data in May of 2025, Dr. Karen Basen-Engquist, Ph.D., of the Department of Behavioral Science at MD Anderson Cancer Center stated: “Extended sitting raises your risk for colorectal, ovarian and endometrial cancers. It also increases your risk for obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular disease.” An MD Anderson Cancer Center (the #1 top-rated Cancer Research Hospital in the U.S.) article on the study can be found at “Can sitting for too long really increase your cancer risk?“.
Fortunately, mitigating risk from your sitting time while working can be straightforward, “if you can remember to do it”. Dr. Basen-Engquist continued: “At least once an hour, get up and move. A few minutes of light activity throughout the day can add up and help lower your cancer risks.“
Many studies have confirmed how employees in discomfort are unnecessarily high consumers of healthcare services, as they seek to make the issues abate, while for knowledge workers the root cause is most often identified in poor ergonomic circumstances.
All of the above intersects with rising healthcare costs which are already prominent on the radar of employers as several factors will cause a 9% increase in healthcare costs next year, according to the Business Group on Health’s 2026 Employer Healthcare Strategy Survey, released on August 19. According to the report, cancer is the top condition driving employer healthcare costs for the fourth year in a row, made worse by a growing prevalence of cancer diagnoses and the escalating costs of treatment.
Behaviors Are The Mechanism By Which Design Produces Outcomes
The science of Ergonomics aims to design work so that it fits the worker—but even the best-designed workstations won’t deliver their potential if the worker doesn’t use them properly. Several aspects of behavior matter:
- Posture and Movement Habits: How someone sits or stands throughout the day, whether they periodically shift posture, take microbreaks, stretch, etc., all directly affect health.
- Awareness and Training: Employees need to know what good posture and ergonomic setup look like, and what behaviors are risky.
- Feedback and Reinforcement: Reminders, cues, and feedback help sustain good behavior; without them people often lapse into bad habits.
- Engagement / Perception of Control: If employees feel they have control (e.g. being able to improve the positioning of elements of their workstation, change posture), they are more likely to behave in ergonomically healthy ways.
- Organizational Culture and Policies: Even if an individual is motivated, organizational norms (e.g. “everyone sits for hours without break”) or lack of managerial enforcement or support can undermine healthy behaviors.
Insights From Research
Your intrepid author here has reviewed hundreds of significant studies over the years (see prior articles citing ergonomics and behavior). Several example studies, which are just a few of many, clearly confirm how employee engagement and behavior are essential, and what happens when behavior is changed (or not):
- A three-year crossover trial among computer users examined an ergonomic intervention (workstation adjustments) vs. control. Workers with the intervention showed improved posture and a reduced prevalence of low-back pain, and these improvements lasted for 30 months. This shows that improved furniture and equipment positioning plus good behavior (i.e. using the new set-up properly) lead to long-term gains.
- A study on feedback mechanisms (verbal and continuous feedback) found that real-time behavior feedback (e.g. via sensors or reminders) produced large improvements. Verbal reminders gave only transient improvement. Behavior reinforcement is stronger when continuous and immediate at the point of use.
- In large energy, pharmaceutical, aerospace and other companies, interventions including training, stretching, and software led to significantly reduced musculoskeletal symptoms (neck, low back, wrist, etc.), and posture scores improved (via RULA method).
- A study of ergonomic awareness, posture, and muscle fatigue among workers showed strong relationships between muscle fatigue and musculoskeletal disorders; interestingly, ergonomic awareness alone wasn’t always predictive of symptoms unless it was accompanied by behavior improvement (e.g. posture, microbreaks, etc.).
Why Behavior Matters Even When Ergonomic Design Is Good
Putting together the evidence from decades of studies, there are several reasons why behavior matters so much:
- Design can only do so much. Even with adjustable furniture or ideal ergonomic design, if people slouch, lean forward, don’t adjust their chairs, or sit for long stretches without movement and microbreaks, strain accumulates. Behavior determines whether the ergonomic potential is realized.
- Habits are strong and persistent. People tend to revert to old, highly repeated (but not always healthy) habits. Unless trained and nudged, they will not maintain the ideal posture or take microbreaks on their own.
- Feedback loops are needed for behavior maintenance. Real‐time feedback, reminders, coaching cues (digital nudges) are shown to produce more sustained behavior change than one-off training.
- Perception of control matters. Studies show that when workers feel they have some control over their environment (adjustable chairs, ability to change positioning of their setup), they are more likely to engage in healthy behaviors.
- Training not just of “what is good” but “how to do it in practice”. Knowledge alone doesn’t always translate into behavior. For example, ergonomic awareness might be high, but unless people know how to arrange their workstation in practice, or have frequent cues/reminders, risks remain.
Planning For Measurable Sustainable Success
Given all of the studies and science, some actionable steps for workplaces that want effective office ergonomics include:
- Invest in training and self-assessment, not just equipment. Training that teaches good posture, proper adjustment of chair/desk/monitors, and how to take microbreaks or stretch matters. Self-Assessment is crucial in resolving simple things as well as generating valuable metrics on organizational risk. As studies show, training + assessment + equipment is better than equipment alone.
- Use feedback mechanisms. Reminders, sensors, feedback tools, coaching systems help maintain behaviors.
- Design adjustable and flexible workspaces. Furniture and equipment need to allow the worker to make adjustments, to shift postures, to change positions. Behavior depends on having options.
- Encourage movement and breaks. Policies or norms to get up, move, stretch hourly are essential. Extended static postures (sitting or standing) have been confirmed as a major risk factor.
- Foster a culture of ergonomics. Leadership should support and model ergonomic behavior; managers should encourage it; ergonomics should be part of onboarding, performance, safety discussions.
- Monitor and evaluate. Use metrics (surveys, objective digital observations, posture assessments) to track whether behaviors are actually changing, and adjust as needed.
Crossing The Chasm
While ergonomic design—chairs, desks, lighting, etc.—sets the stage, employee behaviors are the actors who make it work.
Poor posture, lack of movement and microbreaks, ignorance of best practices, and absence of feedback can all negate even the best ergonomic interventions.
Conversely, when employees are trained, supported, and given the tools + culture + feedback to behave in ways that align with ergonomic principles, employers see measurable reductions in musculoskeletal disorders, lower fatigue, improved comfort, and better job performance.
In short: ergonomics isn’t just about what is designed; it’s just as much about how people use what is designed.
For workplaces seeking to reduce injury, protect and boost health, and improve productivity, paying attention to behavior—and how to support and sustain healthy behaviors—must be a central piece of the strategy.