Health and programming should go together like a horse and carriage. You can’t have one without the other. In our sedentary office work, we often forget that an absence of health is as bad as a lack of programming skills. Joe points out a dozen areas where you and I can do better. Every office worker should read this book and self-reflect on health improvements.
Ask a nondoctor about the likely afflictions of young patients, and he or she will most likely mention ankle sprains, tendonitis, and a few types of unpalatable infections. However, the truth is rather less exciting, and certainly less related to sports. Our list instead includes back pain, headaches, irritable bowel syndrome, upper-limb syndromes, and low mood—a list of maladies that is almost without exception due to a lifestyle filled with time spent stationary indoors, excess typing and repetitive wrist movements from mouse to keyboard, and inappropriate dietary intake. Interestingly and, may I say, without coincidence, these themes mirror the contents of this book, with chapters related to topics such as the right chair, preventing eye strain, agile dieting, and the fascinating topic of vitamin D deficiency, which is only just being adequately explored in the scientific and medical literature.
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