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Cell Phone Equipment & Supplies Long Beach CA

When it comes to entering text on your cell phone, PDA or other 21st century technological convenience, no one can approach your mastery, speed and efficiency in tiny typing. Read on to learn more information about these workplace tech hazards in Long Beach.

Radioshack - Consumer Electronics Stores, Rolling Hills Estates
(310) 541-7070
50 Peninsula Centre
Rolling Hills Estates, CA
A P Global
(562) 989-4577
2300 Walnut Ave Ste D
Signal Hill, CA
Axxess Cellular
(562) 438-1101
2345 E Anaheim St
Long Beach, CA
Wireless City
(562) 599-5615
1767 Pacific Ave
Long Beach, CA
Sprint
(562) 432-9300
245 Pine Ave Ste 103
Long Beach, CA
Radioshack - Orange, Anaheim, Placentia
(714) 996-0450
1478 North Kraemer Boulevard
Placentia, CA
Cellular Outfitter
(562) 432-6909
59 Bay St
Long Beach, CA
Cellular Warehouse
(562) 495-9586
480 Pine Ave
Long Beach, CA
Sky Touch
(562) 494-3712
3314 E Anaheim St
Long Beach, CA
Axxell Communications
(562) 218-3802
325 E Anaheim St
Long Beach, CA
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Practicing Safe Text - "Blackberry Thumb" and Other Workplace Tech Hazards

Leave it to the cheeky Brits at Virgin Mobile to set up a Web site devoted to an emerging workplace hazard and call it PractiseSafeText . As billions of text messages are typed and sent each year on both sides of the Atlantic and around the world, they appear to be taking an unexpected toll.

Remember carpal tunnel syndrome and how it seemed to strike keyboard users and meat-hangers like an epidemic in the ’90s? Now the 21st century has spawned its own repetitive-motion workplace hazard, and it’s hitting us right in a place that separates us from most other creatures – our handy, multi-purpose opposable thumbs.

First, Give It a Cool Name

The American Physical Therapy Association calls it “Blackberry Thumb,” a malady causing pain, swelling or numbness of the thumb from texting on those wee buttons. Physical therapist Margot Miller, president of APTA’s Occupational Health Special Interest Group, says the condition is a repetitive-stress injury caused by performing the same motion for long periods of time.

“The devices are wonderful for short use, but PDAs are being used for everything – phone, addresses, searching the Web and e-mail,” Miller says. “That leads to continual abuse on the joint. At first it’s irritated, then there’s swelling and soreness, and it could lead to tendonitis.”

Miller’s advice is to use PDAs when you have to, but if you’re at a computer, stick to the full-size keyboard.

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